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Savior (The Savior Series Book 1)

Page 5

by Bradley, A. King


  My face grew warm as I wondered how he could have known about my weight. It was true that I weighed 700 pounds, but in no way did I look like I weighed a pound over 140. I was tall and as scrawny as they came, but somehow, Howie knew. Somehow, he had figured it out.

  “How long have you known?” I demanded, feeling betrayed.

  “Don’t worry, Adam. Your secret is still safe. You do a great job of hiding it. It would take someone else as smart as me to figure it out on their own.”

  “What gave me away?”

  “I've always noticed the effects that you have on vehicle suspension, so I knew you had to be a lot heavier than you actually looked. Also, you've broken quite a few desks and chairs over the years as well. Blaming it on the age of our desks was a good cover but I knew it was more than that. It wasn’t until you fought Fat Pat on Tuesday that I was able to estimate how much you weighed. You both left foot impressions in the mud, but your footprints were twice as deep as his, meaning that you have to weigh twice as much as he does. Fat Pat's football profile has him listed as 340 pounds, which means you have to weigh anywhere from 660 to 700 pounds.”

  An uneasy silence crept over the room.

  “So you were investigating me this entire time?” I asked.

  “Of course not, Adam. I just couldn’t help it! This is just how my mind works! I just notice things. I didn’t say anything to you because I didn’t want you to think I intentionally tried to uncover your secret. I just want to help you, Adam. That’s all I've ever wanted.”

  I nodded my head, and then looked at the weights. “Okay. I’ll give it a shot,” I said with a sigh. Something told me that he was telling the truth. I knew Howie was my best chance of figuring out what was happening to me, so I finally decided to go through with his “tests.”

  I loaded 700 pounds of weights onto a nearby bench press bar without breaking a sweat. As I pushed the last 100-pound metal plate into position, I realized that Howie may actually be right.

  That “lab rat” feeling washed over me once more as Howie studied me intensely while I lay down beneath the weights.

  After a deep breath, I gripped the bar.

  “Here goes nothing,” I said as I pushed against it and lifted the weights into the air. The bar curved slightly under the pressure of the weights, but it felt as though I was lifting paper instead of hundreds of pounds of steel. I let the weights fall to my chest and easily pushed them into the air once more. I couldn’t resist doing multiple repetitions. By the time I reset the bar, I had bench-pressed 700 pounds over ten times.

  Howie rubbed his chin as he pondered the significance of my actions. “Interesting,” he said as I climbed from beneath the weights.

  “What’s interesting?” I asked.

  “I didn’t anticipate 700 pounds being so easy for you. In any case, I have come to the conclusion that your maximum may be several thousands of pounds.”

  “Thousands?! Are you serious?”

  “Absolutely. You just tossed around 700 as if it were paper. I would bet a small fortune that you could lift as much as 5000 pounds after that display. What we need to figure out is not only what you can do, but why you can do it.”

  “How do you suppose we do that?”

  “I’ve actually developed a hypothesis, but I need to test it before I can substantiate anything. Can you meet me at the junkyard after school today?”

  “Sure,” I said, trying to hide the feeling of dread brought on by the idea of being subjected to more “tests”.

  “Good. I’ll see you there,” he said with a smile. Howie was back in that mode that I didn’t like, but I knew he meant well.

  The bell finally rang, signaling that it was time to change classes. We both smiled at each other and shook hands as we prepared to part ways. As I left the gym on that day, I wasn't sure of what was happening to me but I was glad that Howie was there to help me figure it out.

  10. DIFFERENCES

  I GOT OFF THE SCHOOL BUS NEAR THE JUNKYARD AND walked the rest of the way. The junkyard had long been abandoned, but I guess no one had ever bothered to clear the site out. Howie, Jason, and I had discovered it a year ago and used to consider it our official secret hideaway, until Jason created 3D.

  I stared at the massive piles of scraps and junk metal as I approached and wondered what answers Howie thought lay there.

  Howie had arrived before me. His face lit up with excitement as soon as he noticed me. As I approached, he was leaning against an old junker pickup truck, probably pondering the extent of my mutation or whatever it was that was wrong with me.

  “So what’s this big hypothesis of yours?” I asked, forcing a grin. I was trying to mirror his excitement because I was concerned that I had hurt his feelings earlier that day when I got defensive about my condition.

  “I’ll get to that after a few tests,” Howie said.

  “What are we testing?”

  “Mainly the extent of your strength and the possibility of other abilities.”

  “Alright then. What do you want to me to do?”

  Howie reached into his backpack and withdrew a radar gun.

  “Did you take that from the gym?” I asked.

  “Sure did! I taught myself how to pick the lock and grabbed it. Don’t worry. I’ll have it back before Coach even notices that it’s gone. The reason I brought it is because I want to use it to track how fast you can move.”

  “What makes you think I run fast at all?”

  “Remember how fast you moved when you stopped those weights from crushing my head earlier today? Starting from a seated position, you were able to stand and cover a distance of ten feet all in less than a second. I’d like to see if you can move that fast again, and I can track the exact speed with this.”

  He was right. I didn’t even remember moving when it all happened, but somehow I had managed to cross the distance in far less time that I should have been able to.

  I took a position 40 meters away from Howie and waited for him to give me the signal. When he raised his left hand and dropped it, I took a deep breath and clumsily sprinted forward. I wasn’t quite the blur that I had been in the gym earlier, but I was definitely moving faster than I usually could. Eventually, I gained much more momentum than I could handle.

  I zipped by Howie, whose eyes widened as he gazed at the radar gun. My attempt to stop was too sudden, and I lost my balance and tumbled head over heels into a huge pile of scrap metal located just before the tall, wooden fence that stood at the edge of the junkyard. As always, the only thing hurt was my pride. Howie rushed to my aide, but once he noticed that I wasn't hurt, he laughed hysterically at me.

  “I wish I had had a camera handy for that,” he said, smiling from ear to ear. I couldn’t help but laugh as well. I usually wasn’t comfortable laughing when the joke was on me, but this was Howie. I knew he was laughing with me and not at me.

  Howie didn’t bother trying to help me up. We both knew he could offer little assistance with my 700-pound body.

  “So, how fast was I going before I wiped out?” I asked as I pulled myself to my feet.

  Howie looked back down at the radar gun.

  “You registered 38 miles per hour on the gun, but I’m sure that’s nowhere near your top speed.”

  “Yeah, my takeoff was horrible and I was moving so fast that it was hard to keep my balance.”

  “I noticed. I’m sure if you practiced maintaining your balance you could probably run three or four times as fast as you did just now.”

  “Seriously? You think I could run over 100 miles per hour?”

  “Of course you can. I just watched you stumble around at nearly 40 miles per hour! That's about twelve miles per hour more than the fastest human footspeed ever recorded. Imagine if you had the training and running form that they had? If you practiced maintaining your form, there's no telling what you could do.”

  I could tell he thought I should be excited by that but I couldn't help feeling depressed. The way he said the fastest
human footspeed didn't sit well with me. If I could stumble faster than the fastest recorded human sprinter could run, did that mean I wasn’t human? Did that mean that I was something else? I turned my back to Howie and stared into the distance as I thought about quitting his round of tests.

  “What’s happening to me, Howie? What’s wrong with me?”

  “Nothing is wrong with you, Adam.”

  “I think you know something. There’s something you’re not telling me, isn’t there?” I asked without looking at him.

  “You’re just different, Adam. That's all there is to it. Contrary to popular belief, different is not always a bad thing.”

  “It is when that difference makes you a freak.”

  “Being faster and stronger than the average human doesn’t make you a freak, Adam. And it doesn’t make you any less human. It makes you special. Do you know what the average human IQ is? Between 85 and 115. Mine is over 200. Do you think I’m a freak too?” he asked.

  “No, but that’s not the same,” I said as I glanced at him over my shoulder.

  “But it is the same!” he shot back. “I’ve always looked at my intelligence the same way you’re looking at yourself right now. You have no idea how it feels to have to give everyone an abridged version of your thoughts lest they not understand what it is that you’re attempting to say. I’ve only just now understood the folly of looking at myself that way. Because of you, I’ve realized that I’m not a freak just because I’d prefer to discuss theoretical astrophysics as opposed to some mindless reality show or some god-awful sports team. Because of you, I know that I’m special. I am not a freak, Adam, and neither are you.”

  As always, Howie was right. In my heart of hearts, I still felt like a freak, but his words were enough to let me know that maybe my subconscious was wrong in this case.

  “Are you going to tell me this theory of yours?” I asked as I faced him.

  “I will, but I need to see a few more things first.”

  A wave a frustration rushed over me but I fought hard to suppress it. “That’s fine,” I said. “What do you need me to do?”

  “This one is simple. I need you to jump as high as you can.”

  Simple for you, I thought sarcastically as I prepared to leap into the air. I took a deep breath and with one great leap, I found myself seemingly floating in the air thirty feet off the ground. I couldn't believe it, but Howie’s expression showed no indications of surprise, as if he had expected me to be able to jump that high.

  I landed with a hard thud and lost my balance as I hit the ground. This is going to take some getting used to, I thought as I pulled myself to my feet.

  “What else?” I asked, still trying to hide my impatience.

  He smiled and pointed to the broken down pickup truck that he had been leaning against when I initially arrived. I glanced at the truck, then back to Howie.

  “What do you want me to do to it?”

  “I want you to lift it.”

  “Howie, that’s impossible.” I knew he had to be joking, but it worried me when he didn’t crack a smile.

  “Just try it, Adam. You can start by lifting one end from the ground. If it’s too heavy, you can simply put it back down and we'll move on.”

  Why did he have so much confidence in my newfound abilities? What was he not telling me?

  “Okay. I’ll give it a shot,” I mumbled before trudging over to the corpse of a truck. I placed my hands under the rear bumper of the junker and prepared to be humiliated. Who am I kidding? I thought. Howie’s smart, but he has to be grasping at straws with this one.

  I planted my feet and pulled upward on the back of the truck with as much force as I could muster. To my surprise, even the weight of the truck was not enough to deny me. It wasn’t as easy as the 700 pounds of weights that I had lifted earlier that day, but it wasn't nearly as impossible as it should have been. Inch by inch, I managed to lift the rear of the truck into the air. Out of the corner of my eye, I could see Howie making mental notes and calculations as I maneuvered my way underneath the truck and grabbed a sturdy bar near the center.

  This is crazy, I said to myself as I kneeled to regain my balance. Howie gave a simple nod of reassurance and I pushed against the truck with all my might.

  Every muscle in my scrawny arms fired away as the rusty tons of metal and gravity tried desperately to foil my plans. I could hear my pulse throbbing inside of my head as I slowly forced the truck higher into the air.

  I was almost there. Beads of sweat raced down my forehead as I rested the truck on my back and shoulders while I balanced it with my hands. I was one giant thrust away from hoisting it above my head, but I could feel the rusted frame of the truck quickly wearing out. Finally, I planted my feet and pushed upward as hard as I could, but the truck’s frame could not sustain its weight any longer. I fell to the ground and cowered as the rusty metal beast snapped into two pieces and tumbled onto me.

  “Adam!” Howie shouted as he rushed over and frantically tried in vain to remove the pieces of the truck from on top of me. “Adam! Adam, talk to me!” His voice cracked as he yanked at a piece of the rusted truck.

  “I’m fine, Howie. I’m not hurt. I’m just trying to catch my breath,” I said between huge gasps for air. “Stand back for a minute.”

  Howie took several steps backward without taking his eyes away from the tons of scrap metal that lay on top of me.

  In one big heave I pushed the two pieces of truck away and sat up. As Howie looked on, frozen in awe, I flopped back to the ground and stared up into the sky above.

  “Are you sure you’re okay, Adam?” he asked nervously.

  “I’m fine, Howie. I’m just exhausted.”

  Howie walked over and collapsed to the ground beside me. He looked into the horizon as the sun started to sink into the trees in the distance.

  “I’m sorry, Adam.”

  “Howie, I’m fine. It didn’t even leave a scratch.”

  “Did you feel any pain?” he asked. The sudden change of tone in his voice let me know that he had switched back to his probing mode again, now that he knew I was unharmed.

  “Yeah, I did, but not very much. It's nothing really. How much does that thing weigh, anyway?”

  “Approximately three tons,” Howie said as he rubbed his chin, seemingly lost in his inner thoughts.

  “Three tons! 6000 pounds! Are you kidding me?” I exclaimed, eyes wide with disbelief. “Howie, are you serious?”

  “Yes, I'm dead serious. The average pickup truck weighs around 6000 pounds.”

  “Howie, what’s going on here? How am I able to do these things?” I asked, hoping he was ready to spill the beans. I had grown tired of his tests and I needed answers.

  “A part of it is adrenaline, but I think the most important factor is your molecular density. Your molecules have to be a great deal denser than the average human’s. That’s the only way to explain why you look so small yet weigh so much.”

  “I have no idea what you're saying, Howie. Dumb it down for me, will you?” I said as I struggled to comprehend his words.

  Howie looked around, then finally grabbed a baseball-sized rock that lay near him and held it where I could see. “This rock is about the size of a baseball, yet it’s a lot heaver than a baseball. The reason why is because the molecules that make up this rock are packed a lot closer together than the molecules that make up a baseball. That means that even though they appear to be the same size, the rock is heavier because it contains more molecules than the baseball. Now imagine if you have two boxes that are the same size. Suppose we were to fill one box completely and only fill the second box to one fifth of its full capacity. If we shut both boxes and simply observe them with our eyes as opposed to weighing them on a scale, they would both appear to look the same size and weight; however, one would actually be much heavier and essentially larger than the other because it contained more mass. In terms of volume, they are the same size, but in terms of mass, the full box is much larger t
han the other.”

  “So that makes me the full box,” I said, finally catching up to Howie’s theory.

  “Precisely,” he stated.

  “But that doesn’t explain the things that I can do.”

  “Actually, it does. Take our arms for example. Your arm is just as scrawny as mine, yet you’re considerably stronger than I am because your muscles are actually several times larger than they appear due to your density. Your entire body is about four to six times as dense as the average human’s, which consequently makes you considerably stronger and faster than the average human.”

  “Then why do I always feel so weak? Why am I not always as strong as I am today?”

  “The dinner,” Howie said calmly, as if he expected the question.

  “Dr. Kate’s dinner? What does that have to do with anything?”

  “I’m not trying to embarrass you, Adam, but it was pretty easy for me to deduce the reason as to why Dr. Kate invited you over for dinner. Just by looking at you, it’s obvious to see that you don’t get enough to eat on a regular basis. Only eating the scraps that they feed us at school for you is like me only eating a slice of bread a day for my entire life. Malnutrition is the reason why you were never able to do the things you did today before now.”

  “So, you’re saying food has given me power?” I asked, puzzled.

  “No, Adam, the food merely provides the energy you need to tap into the potential that lies within your dense molecular composition. Simply put, your 700-pound body requires a lot more food than the average person’s does. There is nothing magical about what you’ve done today. You’ve always had the potential; your muscles just never had the energy they truly needed. You said you ate over twelve plates of food at Dr. Kate’s dinner. That's why you were able to do the things that you did today. When you metabolized that food, for the first time in your life, your body had enough fuel to do what it’s truly capable of.”

  “So you’re saying I should eat that much every day? Where am I gonna get that much food, Howie?” I asked.

 

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