Recoil
Part 2-3: Christmas Special
I watched the others as they absorbed the revelation I had given them. Gradually, Danny and Anne-Rose separated, and turned to me.
"Wait a minute," Danny began. "If -"
I held up a hand. "Ice cream, then questions."
Andrea nodded firmly. "Yes."
-ooo-
Several minutes later, armed with ice cream – in December, no less – we continued our stroll down the Boardwalk. Winter winds whipped in from the ocean, filling our nostrils with the scent of salt air.
"Danny," I stated. "You had a question."
Danny nodded. "Yeah. If Anne-Rose and I are together in the future -"
She elbowed him in the ribs. "Hey, what's this 'if', buster?" she demanded with a grin.
He put an arm around her and pulled her close. "Assuming that Anne-Rose and I are together in the future … " he began again.
"Better," she muttered. Andrea and I hid grins.
Ignoring her, he went on. "Assuming that, where do you fit in? Are you some younger relative to Anne-Rose? Because you
do look alike."
From the look on Anne-Rose's face, I saw that she had just realised the truth. Her eyes went wide. "No," she breathed. "No
way."
I grimaced. "I didn't want things to go this way. I didn't want people
knowing."
Danny got it too, just then. His eyes widened as well. He looked as though he was about to be physically ill; remembering, no doubt, illicit fantasies about me.
Well, I can't help that.
I took a deep breath.
Time to set some things straight.
"I am
not your daughter," I told them firmly.
They both blinked, then, and stared at me. Andrea looked up at me curiously.
"But you look like -" began Danny.
"You just said -" Andrea started to say, at the same time.
I shook my head; my voice was crisp. "I will say this just once. I was born Taylor Anne Hebert. That's not me, not any more." I paused to let that sink in. "My name
here and now is Taylor Snow. I was – will be – born in a different timeline to this one. My parents, Danny and Anne-Rose Hebert,
are not you. They met in a different manner to how you two met. The life they had was – will be – subtly different from the life you will lead. Which means that while you will probably have at least one child, that child
will not be me."
Silence fell as the wind whipped away my words.
Andrea was the first to speak. "But that means you'll never exist -"
I shook my head. "But I
do exist. I'm standing here."
"If you're a time traveller at all," Anne-Rose stated unexpectedly.
Andrea and Danny stared at her; she stepped forward, but kept hold of Danny's hand.
"I'm listening," I told her.
She stared at me. "I could imagine you being our daughter," she mused. "I can see Danny in you. And I guess Danny can see me in you. But that could be coincidence, or disguise, or that you're related in another way."
I nodded. "It could. Or I could have a power that lets me look like you."
She nodded hesitantly, apparently taken a little aback by my willingness to go along with her statements. "And you don't need to be a time traveller to know that Danny and I are well matched. Hell, for all I know, you saw me and decided to foist Danny off on me because you were sick of him mooning over you."
I nodded. "Not a bad appraisal," I agreed. I looked around. "Anyone else want to add to it?"
"Wait a minute," Danny objected, "so you never had amnesia." It wasn't quite a question.
I looked at him. "Nope. I remember everything as clear as day. All my memories are intact."
Even the ones I don't remember having.
He looked betrayed. "So you
lied to me. You lied to Mom and Dad. You lied to Ms Veder."
I took a breath. "Danny," I reminded him. "I've been lying to
everyone from the moment I arrived here. I
couldn't confide in you. Or anyone." I rubbed my chin. "Though I think Nina might have her suspicions."
Anne-Rose broke in again. "But seriously, twenty years back in time? Is there anything, any power, that can do that?"
"Twenty-two," Danny corrected her didactically. "Me and Dad rescued her in nineteen eighty-nine."
"Twenty, twenty-two, whatever. My question stands."
I nodded. "There's one. He's really, really powerful." I tilted my head. "He was in his thirties when I met him, so he's probably in his teens now. Probably hasn't triggered yet."
She looked sceptical. "So you can't produce him."
I shook my head. "Nope. He's not in America, anyway. When I met him, he had one associate who could teleport mountains into orbit to create meteor showers, and another one who could teleport and bypass the Manton limit -"
Danny frowned. "The Manton limit? What's that?"
I paused, looking at them. "You don't know?"
Anne-Rose shook her head. "No. What is it?"
Huh. So it isn't common knowledge. I paused.
Actually, it wasn't then, either. I remembered having to be told about it. Non-capes generally didn't hear about it.
"It's a kind of arbitrary limit on peoples' powers. If someone can affect non-living, they can't affect living, and vice versa. For instance, if I could become insubstantial, the Manton limit would be what stops me from putting my hand in your chest and pulling out your heart."
That brought on another silence, which I made use of, by eating my ice cream.
Andrea broke it this time. "Not that I don't disbelieve you, not really, but … do you have any actual
proof that you're from the future?"
I sighed. "I could reel off future events until midnight, and there'd be no proof until they came to pass. And I can't tell you about
past events because I might have heard of them. So, you can't prove I'm
not from the future, and I can't prove I am. Impasse."
"So tell us stuff about the heroes we have now," offered Andrea. "Stuff that people don't know."
"Not their secret identities," I warned her.
She shook her head. "No, just other stuff."
I blinked. "Um. Let's see. Legend's gay. He'll be coming out in a few years."
Danny's jaw dropped, as did Anne-Rose's. Andrea looked startled, then smug.
"No
way," breathed Danny.
I nodded. "I can guarantee it."
He shook his head. "Mom's
not gonna be thrilled." He paused and grimaced, then looked sympathetically at me. "She's still mad at you, you know."
I nodded. I well knew Dot's views on homosexuality. Ever since she learned I was dating Andrea – and how she found
that out, I would never know – I had not been invited back to the Hebert household. Ironically, this was at exactly the same time as Danny started dating Anne-Rose, and thus took that particular pressure off of me.
It still rankled at me; I, personally, had no axe to grind when it came to homosexuality or otherwise. Legend, Flechette, Parian, and undoubtedly quite a few other capes, were openly gay. In my era, it was less than a non-issue; it simply didn't make the radar. But here and now …
I did not consider myself to be a lesbian. I didn't even consider myself to be bisexual. I didn't look at girls and think, "Wow, that's sexy." I
understood that some girls were more attractive than others, and Andrea was rather pretty in her own right, but that didn't affect my judgement in any way. But the relationship that Andrea and I had more or less fallen into was … different. We both fulfilled a need in the other; it just wasn't the same need.
To say that our relationship was 'complicated' was to understate matters considerably.
But the very act of sleeping in the same bed with another girl was apparently all that Dot needed to raise the red flag. I liked the woman; she put up with George, and had helped raise Danny without too many hangups, including her own bigotry, but I did wish she would get her mind out of the Victorian era.
"Wow, huh," Andrea commented. "That'll kick over a few hornet's nests."
"It makes the world a lot more accepting of the gay community, that's for sure," I agreed.
Anne-Rose gave me the same sort of stare that she had - would have, whatever – used on luckless students who presented sloppy work in her English class. "Unfortunately," she observed, "that still falls into the realm of 'unverifiable future events'. Do you have anything else?"
I was considering that, when Danny asked another question, one that got my attention.
"Why were you sent back? What happened?"
I debated telling them about Behemoth, about how the monster broke loose of the trap designed to kill him and set about rampaging across India. Across the world, for all I knew. But I didn't know how that would go.
One year, I recalled.
He's going to emerge in just one year. The thought was shocking; when I had first arrived, I'd had three years. A comfortable margin, I'd thought. Not any more.
I shook my head. "I can't tell you. Sorry. It's too big."
Anne-Rose's expression turned more sceptical; I racked my brain for a way to convince her.
And then I had it.
Why am I even trying to make her believe me?
"Danny?" I asked. "Do you believe that I'm a time traveller?"
Danny hesitated, then nodded.
"Why?" I asked bluntly. Anne-Rose looked at him, as if wanting to ask the same thing.
"Because … I
know you," he said slowly. "I've known you for years. I pulled you out of the water. You're the exact
opposite of stupid or forgetful. You would never be in the water without a lifejacket on. You're strong, tough, independent. Sometimes you say things that make me wonder. But you never, ever lead anyone on. Except with that damn amnesia thing." He smiled. "Whatever children Anne-Rose and I have someday, I'd be proud if they were half the person you are."
The warm feeling that his words gave me spread through me.
Wow. I didn't realise that he felt this strongly. Anne-Rose – Mom – you're a lucky girl. I hope you realise that.
"Thanks," I told him simply, then looked at the redhead next to me. "Andrea. Do
you believe I'm a time traveller?"
She frowned. "If time travel's a thing … yeah. I believe you."
"Okay," I responded. "Why?"
"Well," she began. "You have some really weird scars. And I can tell you've been through a lot; the way you act in crowds. How hard you train with ROTC." She paused.
"Yes?" I prompted.
Wow, she's really perceptive.
That was when she dropped the bombshell. "And … you talk in your sleep sometimes. Conversations. About things that don't make sense."
I went cold all over.
She's been listening to me talking to Lisa.
"What … have you heard?" I asked quietly.
She shook her head. "Like I said, doesn't make sense. About the Protectorate, and something called the PRT, and something else called the Triumvirate, and something else called Behemoth, and something called Endbringers …?"
"
Fuck," I muttered. "I'm going to have to start wearing a gag to bed or something." I stared at her, willing her to understand how serious this was. "Andrea. What you just said? Incredibly dangerous. Don't ever say those things out loud again. Okay? Try not to even
think about them."
Thank God I didn't mention the Simurgh in her hearing, or Leviathan. Or how he hits Brockton Bay. Or – oh god – Eidolon's role with the Endbringers.
She stared back at me, her green eyes tinged with concern. "Okay, okay, I got it." But then her natural curiosity got the better of her. "But
why?"
I sat down on a bench, and put my forehead in my hands. "In about one year, it'll all start becoming really, really clear. But I do
not want to talk about it. Not here. Not now."
She sat beside me and held me close; I shuddered, then leaned into her embrace. "Hey," she murmured soothingly. "It'll be okay. It'll all be okay."
Her arms around me were so very comforting. This was the main reason Andrea and I had remained as a couple; she kept me grounded in a way that I needed. That I hadn't
known I needed for two long years.
I shook my head. "No. No, it won't."
A creak informed me that Danny had sat on the other side of me. He put his arm around my shoulders. "Hey, are you all right?" he asked with concern.
"No," I told him, although I appreciated the concern. "You've all just reminded me that I need to start moving faster." I took a deep breath. "I need to set things in motion." Looking up, I caught Anne-Rose's eye. "You don't know me, you don't believe me. That's fine. Ask yourself; do you want to spend your life with anyone other than Danny Hebert?"
There was a long pause. She looked at me, then at Danny. Slowly, she reached down and took his hand. "No," she told me. "No, I don't."
I nodded. "Good enough. Forget the time travel stuff. Get your degree. Hell, change your degree to something else. Get married. Or get married and
then get your degree; I don't care. Be with Danny. Have kids. Be happy." I smiled; it was brittle, but it was there. "I'm just a crazy girl who said some crazy things one crazy December day."
She still stood there, staring at me. I looked back at her. "Yes?"
She shook her head. "I don't know what to think, now. Time travel doesn't make sense, but … Danny believes you, and Andrea believes you … "
I smiled; it was more genuine. "I'm not going to force you to believe one way or the other. It's your choice. Just do me one favour."
She tilted her head. "What's that?"
I made my tone utterly serious. "Don't tell anyone what we've said today. At all. Ever."
She blinked. "Yeah, okay." A nervous chuckle escaped her lips. "Like anyone would believe me."
I nodded. "Exactly."
Danny squeezed my shoulders. "What can I do to help?"
I shook my head slightly. "You need to be with Anne-Rose, to make a life with her, to raise your kid – or kids – responsibly, and to do a good job in the Dock Workers' Association."
He frowned. "But … I want to help you."
"Trust me," I told him sincerely, "you will be."
He blinked. "Oh. Okay."
I put my arm around his shoulders and squeezed. "And just in case I've forgotten to say this in the past? Thank you, for being a good friend. I really appreciate it."
"You know," he commented doubtfully, "this is starting to sound awfully like a goodbye."
I sighed; white vapour puffed from my lips. "In a way, it is," I admitted. "I need to step up my game, and that means I'll be a bit busier from now on. I'm not welcome at your house any more, so Andrea and I will be getting an apartment."
"What will you do for money?" he asked. "Mom probably won't talk, but if word about you and Andrea gets back to the Port Authority, they might just find an excuse to let you go.". He grimaced. "She probably won't
support it, but she wouldn't stand in the way either, not with her beliefs."
I grimaced; losing the job at the Port Authority would hurt; it had provided me with useful, if irregular, income over the last two years. "They'd have to give me two months notice, if they did it at all," I told him. "After that … I think we'll manage. Don't worry about me. Really."
We stood up together; I leaned up and kissed him on the cheek, then gave him a little shove. "Go. I'll be in touch."
Side by side, they made their way down the Boardwalk. Danny glanced back once; Anne-Rose, not at all. I waved. I think he waved back.
Andrea and I turned and began walking in the other direction. We made it about three steps before Andrea's simmering anger exploded. "Those
bigots!" she burst out.
I'd been waiting for that; I knew Andrea's moods by now. She was friendly, happy, mercurial and intensely protective of me.
"It is what it is," I told her. "That's what people are like, these days. It
will get better." I frowned. "It'll hurt if I lose that job, though."
Andrea clung to me. "What
are we going to do for money?" she asked. "I have some saved up, and you have some yourself, but we're gonna run out sooner or later, if we have to depend on my pay." She got a stipend from her parents, and supplemented it with a part-time job at a local fast-food restaurant.
I held her close. "Do you believe I'm a time traveller?" I asked her softly.
She looked up at me, her green eyes huge. "I
want you to be a time traveller," she told me fiercely. "I
want you to be as cool, and interesting, and amazing, as I think you are." She paused. "But how's that going to make us money?"
I grinned. "Just leave that to me."
After a moment, she nodded. "I'm glad you told us that … about yourself," she amended. "But why? Surely you could have made up some other story?"
I shook my head. "I'm tired of lying," I sighed. "Just once, I wanted someone to know who I was, to have someone I didn't have to keep remembering to lie to."
"You could have told Gladys," she reminded me doubtfully. "As it is, Anne-Rose and I have only known you for a month or so. And Anne-Rose isn't all that sure you
aren't crazy."
I nodded wearily. "Yeah, but … Gladys trusts me enough not to ask questions like that." I thought about it. "I might tell her anyway. Maybe. Later."
A chilly gust swept in across the Boardwalk. Even for Brockton Bay in winter, this was a cold day. Andrea shivered and snuggled up to me. "Can we go back to the College now? I'm getting cold."
I nodded. "Sure."
We set off, gloved hand in gloved hand. As we headed for the bus stop, Andrea looked up at me. "So you really want to get an apartment with me?"
I smiled down at her. "Really."
Her voice was playful. "So I'm not just your college fling?"
I tapped her gently on the tip of her nose with the tip of my finger. "Andrea, you were
never my college fling. You're far more important to me than that." I raised an eyebrow. "Am I yours?"
Her voice was thoughtful. "At first, yeah, just a bit. Now … not so much."
"Good to hear it."
We had walked a little way when I had a thought. "Andrea … "
"Yeah?"
"If I asked you to change your major to business management, could you? Would you?"
She stopped and stared up at me. "I guess I
could. It wouldn't screw me around too much. Why?"
"I was just thinking … I'm going to need someone I can trust utterly to run my financial empire, once I get it up and running."
She blinked. "Financial empire? Where are you going to get a financial empire from?"
I grinned. "You'll see."
She grabbed my arm and squeezed it. "Tell me."
I shook my head playfully, still grinning. "Nuh uh."
She bounced up and down on her toes, like a kid begging for candy. "Tellll meeee …."
My grin was threatening to burst into a giggle. "Mmmmmnope."
"You are mean and horrible and I don't like you any more."
"I'll show you when we get back to the dorm."
Her mood changed instantly. "Okay." She grabbed me and pulled me down for a kiss. I let her; if I admitted it to myself, Andrea's kisses made our odd relationship somewhat more enjoyable.
"You're still mean and horrible," she told me, "but I'll put up with that."
I grinned. "And you've got the patience of a gerbil on speed, but I'll put up with that."
She giggled; I put my arm around her shoulders and she snuggled into me. We walked the rest of the way to the bus stop in companionable silence.
-ooo-
We stood atop a cliff; far below, the green carpet of the jungle rippled and swayed to the unseen motions of the massive creatures within. Lisa finished strapping on a helmet, then turned to look at me. "Coming along?"
I was eyeing the jungle, and a familiar-looking stone tower that arose from it, not far from the cliff. In the distance, winged figures wheeled; I was fairly sure that they weren't birds.
I'm not so sure. I seem to recall you mentioning 'extreme hang-gliding' once upon a time.
I paused. You do know that Andrea knows, right?
Lisa nodded. "That's fine. She's coming to terms with it. Anne-Rose won't tell either."
Right, right. Uh … you also know that I might be losing my job at the Port Authority soon.
Lisa nodded again, thumbing shells into the magazine of a large shotgun. "Yeah, saw that coming."
I grunted. I didn't. Thought she might support me more than that.
Lisa shrugged. "You told her you were straight, then you picked up a girlfriend in your first week of college. She can't help but see it as a betrayal of her trust."
I groaned. But I'm not gay.
"
I know that, and you know that, but all Dot knows is that you're holding hands with another girl in public."
I didn't even mean to get involved with her! It was an accident!
Lisa grinned, fox-like. "Yeah. I know."
I looked suspiciously at her. You set the whole thing up, didn't you?
"
Who, me?" she asked innocently. "Why, I'd have to be a master manipulator to do that."
In other words, yes.
She nodded, grinning. "Okay, now tell me you're not happy."
I sighed. Of course I'm happy. It's a little weird, but she's doing for me what I did for Brian. Only I'm more aware of it than he was.
"
Because you weren't as damaged as he was. And you're stronger. A lot stronger."
I nodded. If you say so. Anyway. Before you leap off this cliff to your certain doom -
Lisa grinned and racked the slide on her shotgun. "Something's certain doom, anyway."
I snorted. Something like that, yeah. I just needed some information from you.
Lisa nodded. "Thought you might." She reached into a thigh pocket and pulled out a mini tablet. "Here's what you want. Stock market and racing tips. This should build you a nice amount of money with which to incorporate your company."
I nodded. Though that's a little way in the future.
She grinned and gave me a one-armed hug that made me nostalgic. "Three steps ahead, remember?"
I nodded. That's how you always used to play it.
She snorted indelicately. "'Used to', hah! I never stopped, and you know it."
I grinned. Good point.
She picked up the hang-glider, and I helped strap her into it. The shotgun went into a special holster that swung free from the frame. Ready?
She nodded. "Kiss before you go?"
I kissed her. Her lips tasted of dust and blood; the rising wind made me blink -
-ooo-
I was reclining on my bed at the College; Andrea was just sitting down alongside me.
I smelt the sweet aroma of the cup of tea, just before she handed it to me. She helped me sit upright without spilling it. I sipped it; just the way I like it.
"So, what happens now?" she asked. "What was that all about?"
I grinned at her and handed her the pad that I had been holding in my other hand. On it was the information that had been on Lisa's mini-tablet.
She read it through, eyebrows elevating toward her hairline. "This is genuine?" she asked.
I shrugged. "Only one way to find out."
She went through the information again. "How did you … get this?"
I spread my hands. "Time traveller, remember?"
She frowned. "And you memorised every single movement of the stock market, every single winner of every single race, for the last twenty years? Just in
case?"
I paused. "Not … exactly. But in a way, sure."
She bit her lip. "Isn't it kind of … cheating, to do it this way?"
Carefully, I put the cup down. Then I put my hands on her shoulders. "Andrea," I told her quietly. "I have seen death and devastation like you could never imagine. My friends, where I come from, are dead.
All of them. Monsters walk the earth."
"Monsters?" she squeaked, her voice rising involuntarily.
I nodded. "Monsters. People with powers, who do unimaginably horrific things with them. And real, live, terrible monsters." I took a deep breath. "I intend to bring that to an end before it even begins. I will do
absolutely anything to get that done. I will lie, I will cheat and I will steal. I will
kill. Winning money on a horse race by mildly dubious means is the very
least of what I'm willing to do, to achieve my ends."
She stared at me, green eyes wide. "You're serious," she whispered.
I nodded, unsure of how she would react.
Have I driven her away?
She seemed to rally. "And me?" she asked. "Am I a part of this?"
I nodded, relief trickling through my gut. "Only if you want to be," I assured her. "But if you're in, you're in all the way. No holding back, no hesitation. I tell you what to do, you do it."
Slowly, she nodded. "I … can do that," she agreed.
"It'll be dangerous," I reminded her. "Once we get going, we will make enemies. Some of them will try to capture us, some will just try to kill us. I'll do my best to keep us safe, but … "
She nodded. "... but there are no guarantees. Got it."
I held up the pad. "There's instructions here for investing money in the stock market. Also, the best places to put bets on horse races. We follow those instructions, we should be able to make it work."
She smiled. "Okay, just one more thing."
I looked at her. "Oh?"
She pulled me close. "A kiss. For luck."
I snorted. "For luck. Sure." But I kissed her anyway. I'd heard of worse reasons.
-ooo-
You're getting better at modelling reindeer, I noted. These ones don't all look the same.
Lisa nodded, smugly. She twitched the reins, and the massive creatures hauling the sleigh increased their pace a little. Snow flew up from their hooves, and sprayed up from the runners, as we cantered through the pine forest.
The cold wind of our passage turned my cheeks red and the tips of my ears numb; I whooped as Lisa expertly steered us around a large clump of trees, and on to a frozen lake.
And then the ice beneath us began to crack; large white fissures spread out in all directions.
Uh, Lisa …
Lisa shook out the reins and gave the deer their heads. They stretched out into a flat gallop, heavy sleigh and all. We pounded across the surface of the ice, ahead of a fantail of spreading cracks, the wind whistling past our ears. My fur hood fell back and my hair streamed out behind like a flag.
When I glanced behind us, the ice was breaking up, the cracked chunks falling apart and showing black water between. But the reindeer were still pulling strongly; Lisa was whooping with joy as we sped across the deadly terrain. I joined in.
And then we were off the ice once more; just as we gained the land, the runners of the sled dipped down just slightly at the back, as the ice gave way. But it was too late; we were safe on land once more. I could feel my heart beating rapidly, even though I knew we had never been in any real danger; Lisa had just been showing off.
A short passage through the snowbound forest later, we pulled to a halt before a picture-perfect cottage. Snow lay heavy on the roof and lined the windowsills; icicles drooped from the eaves. Yellow lamplight issued from the windows, and I could see decorations in plenty, both inside and out.
We jumped from the sleigh, the reindeer beginning to steam from the exertion of their run. Lisa did something to the front of the sled, and they were released from their harness; they trotted off to forage for feed.
We entered the cottage. Inside was toasty warm; we shed our thick furs, hanging them on a rack provided.
Wow, I murmured. A fire crackled merrily in the fireplace, and there were several comfortable looking armchairs around the room, as well as a sofa. One corner held a small round table with several chairs; in another, a large Christmas tree groaned under the weight of the decorations and lollipops, bon-bons and small toys, that adorned its branches. Beneath those same spreading branches, presents large and small, carefully labelled, were stacked.
Those aren't all for me, are they? I asked, indicating the presents. I had no idea what Lisa could 'give' me that I could use in the real world, but the thought that she would put in the effort gave me a warm feeling inside.
"
Not all of them, no," she told me, but didn't elaborate further. "Now, would you like some egg-nog? I believe I have some here."
So we sat on the sofa and drank thick, rich egg-nog, and talked about the old days. About my first meeting with the Undersiders, and how I had joined them.
So you knew from the beginning that I meant to turn you in, I commented.
She nodded, grinning. "It was kind of obvious."
So why did you? Invite me in, I mean? I mean, I chose not to betray you in the end, but I did mean to, at least for a while there.
She put her arm around me and leaned into me. "It was a calculated risk, sure, but one I figured I could handle. Besides, it was all about you, then. You were trying to get yourself killed, and I didn't want to let that happen."
I nodded. Thanks for that, by the way.
She chuckled. "What are friends for?"
You know, looking back, it still doesn't feel like I was trying to get myself killed.
She held up her mug to the light, as if she could see through the ceramic and the thick liquid within. "Well, there are such things as subconscious actions. Your life was one big horrible mess. You saw no way out, except to become a hero and go down in a blaze of glory. Even the Wards were not what you wanted. So … "
Cold chills chased themselves down my back, at how close it had come. Yeah. And you invited me in, and you were so friendly -
"
Hey," she admonished me playfully. "You needed a friend. But that doesn't mean I didn't like you from the beginning. You were so earnest, so naïve. And when you first saw Brian … " She giggled.
I covered my confusion by taking a drink from my mug. Enough about Brian. I feel bad enough about breaking up with him when I did.
"
Not breaking up, not cutting ties, would have been worse for him, I think," Lisa told me. "But you came back to us, at the end. You were a part of us, when it mattered."
I leaned my head against hers. Thanks. That means a lot to me. I paused. Um, is there any chance, do you think, of preventing … the big guy?
Lisa shook her head, looking serious. "I can't see a way of either warning them or stopping Behemoth from emerging, without ending up squarely in Cauldron's crosshairs. We can't really stand that sort of attention, right now. So we fly under the radar and stick with the original plan."
I grimaced. So it's going to happen?
She squeezed my shoulders. "Yeah. That bit's gonna happen. Sorry."
Ugh. I sat back and drank the rest of my egg-nog. Well, at least we're starting to set things in motion.
Lisa nodded. "Yeah." Her head came up. "Oh hey, company."
I blinked. I'd been hearing crunching snow outside, but I had ascribed that to the reindeer. Now I looked out through the window, and I saw a huge creature move past, a giant lizard-dog thing that was achingly familiar.
Oh god. I turned to Lisa. Oh god. You didn't. You did. How did you - ?
A knock resounded on the door. I got up, took a step toward it, and froze. Lisa got up as well, and took my free hand. "Like you said," she told me simply. "I've been getting really good at modelling things. Like snow, and fire, and trees, and animals." She paused. "And people."
She towed me toward the door, and opened it.
A tall figure stood there; he stepped forward and pushed back his hood. I looked into Brian's eyes.
"
Hey, Taylor," he greeted me familiarly. "How have you been?"
-ooo-
It was much later in the evening.
Alec was passed out in one of the armchairs from a surfeit of egg-nog,and Aisha was stretched out on the sofa, playing with a toy from one of her presents; it seemed to consist of interlocked metallic rings. Rachel was sitting on the thickly-rugged floor of the cottage with a pup that Lisa had given her, teaching it commands, while Lisa and Brian and I sat around the table in the corner of the living room, talking about existential existence.
I pointed at Lisa; my vision doubled slightly, and I blinked. Wow, that egg-nog is strong. I didn't know you could get dream in a drunk. I mean, drunk in a dream.
Lisa smirked; Brian chuckled. I went on. Anyway. You two. Lisa, I'm not a hundred per cent sure that you're really the real Lisa I know. But, Brian, I know you aren't.
Lisa shook her head. "But in a way, he is."
I frowned. How's that work again?
"
It's like this," Lisa told me. "I'm modelling him on what I remember of him – and if you recall, after my second trigger, I knew everything – and I've set it up so that he'll act exactly like the Brian you remember. And he 'remembers' everything that Brian did, about you and me, anyway."
But it's not really him, I told her stubbornly.
She shrugged. "You're not the same person you were when you met him," she reminded me. "Cells have divided and died. You've had new experiences. Much of your body is different. But you're still 'you'."
"Let me try," suggested Brian.
Lisa shrugged. "Be my guest."
Brian turned to me. "Imagine it's a Star Trek transporter. It's digitised me, frozen me, and just now reconstituted everything that's essentially me here and now."
I blinked, trying to process that. So you're 'kind of' Brian, then? I ventured. Not the original, but close enough that it doesn't matter?
Lisa nodded. "Just like the 'you' here in this dream is 'kind of' you."
Huh. I looked at Brian, and then turned to Lisa. Getting up, I took her in my arms, and held her close. Thank you, I told her. Thank you for doing this. Even if you never do it again. My eyes prickled, and I felt the tears start to flow.
She put her arms around me. "That's all right. You needed this, I think."
The tears flowed faster, and I cried on her shoulder while she held me close and patted my back. Brian put his strong arms around us both. We rocked back and forth while I cried for what I had lost, what I would never see again; my friends, my family, the world that I had once known.
When I was finished, Lisa gave me a tissue, and I wiped my eyes then blew my nose. Then I grabbed Brian.
Come here, you, I told him, and kissed him.
It was a good kiss, one that sent a warm feeling from the top of my head to the tips of my toes. Andrea was a good kisser, but this was the difference; this was what had been missing.
Kissing Brian in real life had never had this effect on me; perhaps it was wish fulfilment, or maybe I was just more mature. It might have even been the egg-nog. In any case, by the end of the kiss, every nerve ending was buzzing and I was floating on air.
Wow, I murmured. Wow. I leaned against him – despite the fact that I was taller than I had been, he was still taller than me – to catch my breath.
But then, Lisa put her hand on my shoulder. "You're about to wake up," she told me. "Sorry."
Darn, I muttered. I let go of Brian and hugged Lisa. This has been a really wonderful evening, I told her. Thanks for doing this.
She smiled. "It was my pleasure, really. Kiss before you go?"
I kissed her; it was just a platonic peck on the lips, next to what I had just done with Brian. Her lips tasted of dust and blood and egg-nog. Tears of happiness, of regret, stung my eyes; I blinked.
Lisa and Brian spoke together. "Merry -"
-ooo-
"- Christmas!"
I opened my eyes, to look up at Andrea. She was straddling me, on top of the covers, wearing a 'sexy Santa' outfit and a cheerful expression.
Reaching up, I grabbed her and pulled her down to my level. She yelped once, then accepted the situation, snuggling up next to me.
"Merry Christmas, girlfriend," I whispered to her, and kissed her, then held her close.
"Wow," she murmured with a giggle. "I should wake you up like that more often."
"It's a special day," I told her. "You're a special person."
She made no answer to that, merely wriggling under the covers with me and holding me closer. I noted that she made no attempt to grope me or kiss me without permission; since our first morning, she had been punctilious about following the rules.
Relaxing in her arms, I smiled.
That was a really nice thing that Lisa did. Unlike an ordinary dream, the memory of Lisa's Christmas party was not fading away; I treasured every moment of it. Even though I knew quite well that it hadn't really happened, on one level it had, and I had enjoyed it immensely.
My smile widened as I recalled that last kiss with Brian, and how it had set every nerve ending afire.
Maybe I should have sneaked upstairs with him, I thought with a silent giggle.
But then, that might have gotten a little weird. I still didn't know exactly
how Lisa's imaginary worlds worked, and I didn't want to put something like that on her.
"What's funny?" murmured Andrea, right next to my ear, her breath warm on my skin.
"Nothing," I murmured back, enjoying the feeling of closeness, of companionship. As much as Andrea understood me and my moods, I did not know how she would react if I tried to tell her about Lisa and her memory palace and many dreamworlds. Pushing the covers back, I sat up. "Shall we get up? There's presents to open and furniture to assemble."
-ooo-
We had acquired the apartment just before Christmas Break started. Lisa's money-making tips had come in immensely handy; the bond payment and other expenses had gone from being a potentially ruinous expense to more or less pocket change. On Lisa's advice, we had taken certain steps designed to ensure that while our winnings would be taxed, they would not show up as directly belonging to a couple of previously-poor college students.
In time, we would contact the Number Man to handle our assets; right now, mainly to avoid coming to Cauldron's notice too early, we would refrain from that step.
Of course, Andrea knew nothing about Cauldron or the Number Man, and she would continue to know nothing. It was for her safety. I had gotten her into this, and I didn't want her getting hurt because of me.
-ooo-
In a slightly bizarre reflection of a distant memory, most of our furniture had arrived flat-packed, and we were apparently expected to assemble it ourselves. I recalled doing this exact thing with Brian, on the day that I had first met Aisha. It seemed to me that I had been so young then; that was before I had turned sixteen. His presence had so overpowered me that at one point he'd had to remind me to breathe. That was, of course, before Leviathan, before the Nine, before Dragon, before I had shot Coil, before Echidna ... so much I had been through. So much adversity. Perhaps it had toughened me, strengthened me.
In any case, I was able to perform the same job with Andrea at her flirtiest and most playful without feeling the slightest bit awkward; even the amazingly dirty jokes that she told me did nothing more than make me laugh. There
was one way she knew how to make me blush, but that way only worked in company.
Frank and Gladys arrived at around midday; they pitched in, so that when Danny and Anne-Rose arrived at one, even the big dining table was on its legs and looking good.
Along with Anne-Rose, Danny brought a surprise guest. I had seen Nina off and on over the last two years, but not regularly, and I hadn't been sure that she was still in town.
"My goodness, Taylor!" she exclaimed as we hugged tightly. "You've grown!
And put on muscle!"
I smiled at her. "You haven't changed a bit," I told her. "How have you been?"
"Doing well, doing well," she assured me. She looked around at the apartment. "You've done well for yourself."
I nodded and smiled. "Have you met Andrea?" I asked. "Andrea, I think I told you about Nina. Nina Veder, Andrea Campbell. Andrea, meet the coolest psychologist and part-time ship's doctor in Brockton Bay."
Nina shook Andrea's hand with a smile. "Any friend of Taylor's is a friend of mine." She glanced from Andrea to me and back again. "Now, that's interesting."
"What's interesting?" asked Andrea.
"I've been getting chapter and verse from Dorothy Hebert about how Taylor's 'fallen into wickedness'," Nina explained cheerfully. "Danny's told me about how you two are in a relationship. But … "
I rolled my eyes. "Don't tell me. You're the only damn person in Brockton Bay who can tell that I'm
not a lesbian, without me having to explain the point carefully for five minutes first? With diagrams?"
Nina grinned. "You forget. I live with two lesbians."
Andrea looked at her with interest.
"She's straight," I explained hastily.
"So are you," Andrea replied cheerfully.
Nina shook her head, with a smile. "Not interested," she forestalled Andrea. "I've already had all the offers. I
do know what I'm missing, and I'm happy with what I've got."
Andrea pouted momentarily, then grinned at Nina. "Okay, fine," she conceded. "But I bet you haven't heard
how Taylor and I got together."
"Actually," Nina agreed, "I haven't."
Andrea turned to me. "Can I tell her? Please please please?"
I sighed. "Sure, go ahead. Everyone else knows about it."
"Are you sure?" Andrea asked. "I know how much it embarrasses you."
I hugged her. "It should embarrass you too, but as we've both discovered,
nothing embarrasses you for more than a minute."
She giggled. "Darn tootin'."
As I left, I heard her begin the tale. "The first time I met Taylor, I kissed her because I thought she was Anne-Rose ..."
In the kitchen, I checked on the soda. It was still chilling nicely, so I decided to leave it another half hour. While I was there, I poured myself a glass of cold water.
As I was drinking it, Anne-Rose entered the kitchen. "Oh, there you are," she greeted me cheerfully. "This is a nice place you have here. And I'm really enjoying the party."
I smiled at her. "You and Danny look good together," I told her truthfully.
She nodded, with a sly grin. "He's talking about getting that Engineering degree. That means we can spend even more time together on campus."
"That's excellent," I told her. "I'm happy for you."
"And I thought about what you said about changing my major," she added thoughtfully. "It's Mom and Dad who've been pressuring me to read law. I'm not sure it's my thing. But I don't know what I really want to do."
I kept my face impassive. "Do whatever makes you comfortable with yourself," I advised her. "You know he'll back you up."
Her smile lit up her whole face. "Yes. I know." She opened her arms and hugged me. Slightly surprised, I returned the embrace. "Thank you," she told me. "Thank you for introducing me to Danny."
I couldn't help smiling myself. "Hey, I had my reasons, right?" I replied. "I'm just glad you're happy."
She nodded. "Well, for whatever reason you did it, I'm glad. Thank you."
I shrugged. "That's okay. I was just getting a drink of water. Want one?"
Just about then, Gladys strolled into the kitchen. "Ah, here's where you are. You know Andrea's telling the story again, don't you?"
I nodded. "Nina hasn't heard it yet. And she tells it better than I do."
She grinned. "I've seen you turn bright red when Andrea tells it."
Anne-Rose giggled. "I've seen people fall off their chairs laughing when
Taylor tells it."
I could feel the blush starting already, so to change the subject, I held up the cold water bottle. "Anyone want one? Or should I just pour it over your heads?"
They laughed and fetched cups; I poured water. "So how are you and Frank going, Gladys?"
"Thanks. Oh, we're doing fine. Frank doesn't know that I know it, but he's got a ring picked out. I overheard him telling Danny that he's gonna ask me to marry him when I graduate."
Anne-Rose squealed and grabbed her in a hug. I joined in, because I was happy for them both.
"That's great," I told her. "Frank's an awesome guy."
"And he'd still be fumbling over his own feet about asking me out if you hadn't put him right," Gladys observed accurately.
"And made sure I was primed to say yes."
Anne-Rose blinked.
"Taylor got you two together?"
Gladys nodded earnestly. "She was very sure about it."
"Huh," commented Anne-Rose, looking at me thoughtfully. "Isn't that interesting."
"What's interesting?" asked Gladys curiously. "That she got the both of us together?" She raised her cup of water – miraculously unspilt – to me in a toast. "A regular matchmaker, our Taylor. Along with her many other talents."
I cleared my throat uncomfortably. "Uh, Gladys, there's something that I need to tell you. That I should have told you before now. Come on, let's go out on the balcony."
"Why not here?" she asked.
I shook my head. "Someone might walk in. Let's talk on the balcony."
" … okay," she agreed. "The balcony it is."
Good old Gladys. She never argues. Never questions a direct decision.
We exited the kitchen, and were heading for the balcony when I heard a knock on the front door. Curious, I diverted to answer it.
Who would this be? As far as I knew, everyone I expected to arrive was already there.
Danny got there first; he opened the door, then stopped. I moved up behind him, and stopped also. I recognised the visitor, of course; I just had no idea why he was there.
"Well?" he demanded. "Am I welcome to come in?"
I spoke first.
"Uh, sure. Come on in. I'm just wondering
why you're here."
Danny and I stepped aside to allow the latest guest to enter, and Danny finally found his voice.
"Oh, uh, hi, Dad."
-ooo-
Mercifully, Andrea had finished telling Nina the story; the aforementioned Ms Veder couldn't seem to keep a smirk off of her face. As George Hebert entered, all eyes turned toward him.
"I won't be staying long," he told us bluntly. "But young Taylor was a member of my household for some years, and so I believe she is owed this courtesy."
"I remember you!" Andrea burst out. "You're Danny's father. I met you when Taylor was moving in."
He nodded once, eyeing her abbreviated Santa outfit, with the matching red tights, which she had donned when Frank and Gladys arrived. "You were dressed scandalously then, and I see you have not changed your ways since."
She blinked, then glanced at me; I shook my head fractionally.
George turned to me. "I do not share Mrs Hebert's views on your situation. Nor -" with another side glance at Andrea, " - do I consider it an entirely wholesome one, but I am of the opinion that once one's bed is made, one lies in it."
I nodded. "Thanks, George. Uh, just so you know, my grades are pretty good. In case you thought she was, uh, distracting me."
He nodded slowly, conceding the point. "Just know that if you should ever want to come home, your room will always be free. With one condition, of course. Mrs Hebert would insist upon it." His eyes cut sideways to Andrea once more; the meaning was clear.
I kept my voice firm. "Thank you, George. I appreciate it, but as you can see, I
am home. Andrea and I signed the lease on this place last week."
He frowned. "Are you sure that you can afford a place like this? Your job at the Port Authority -"
I nodded. "I know about that. It's all good. We can afford it."
"Hmph." Though obviously curious, he changed the subject. "Very well. I understand that you are responsible for Danny meeting Annette."
I blinked, then realised that he meant Anne-Rose.
Only he would use just her first name.
"Uh, yeah. I introduced them and they basically hit it off."
He turned to look at Anne-Rose and then back to me. "My memory was not deceiving me. You two
do look remarkably alike."
I shrugged. "You know how it is. They say everyone has a double somewhere."
"I believe they may be distant cousins," Nina Veder suggested. "She once told me that she recalled that her grandparents live, or lived, in Brockton Bay."
George nodded stolidly. "That would make a certain amount of sense," he agreed. "Someone who did not know you well could easily mistake one for the other."
I glanced at Andrea and raised an eyebrow; she coloured slightly, then poked her tongue out at me.
George didn't seem to notice. "If you will excuse me, I need to talk to Danny."
I nodded. "Sure. Thanks for turning up. I appreciate it."
He moved off, and I caught Gladys' eye; we headed for the balcony once more.
-ooo-
"Wow!" she muttered as I slid the glass doors shut. "That man does not do tact, does he?"
I shrugged. "I suspect that he's never seen the need."
Just then, the glass doors slid open again, and Andrea joined us on the balcony.
"Is it just me, or did he just insult both of us in front of everyone?" she demanded.
I hugged her; unusually for her sunny temperament, she was stiff as a board. Gradually, as I held her, she relaxed.
"Hey," I murmured. "He's like that." I grinned. "Get Danny to repeat his speech about how if he caught Danny sniffing around after me, he'd throw me out on the street."
"Sniffing?" she repeated. "Are you serious?"
"The exact word," I assured her. "He's a Christian, and serious about it. The fact that he's even turned up here is evidence that he still thinks I'm not beyond redemption."
"Wow, really? Redemption?" asked Andrea. "There's people who still think like that?"
Gladys nodded. "Hell yes. You should meet his wife. Lovely old lady, full of Christian charity, but will not abide gays. Simply won't even go there."
"On second thought," I ventured. "Maybe you shouldn't."
"Hm, yeah," Gladys agreed. "Anyway, Taylor. You said there was something you needed to tell me out here. We're out here. What was so important?"
In the silence that followed, I became suddenly aware of Andrea, watching Gladys' face, getting ready for the first reaction of surprise.
I took a deep breath. "You're my best friend. I should have told you this earlier. You know the amnesia I've always said I had? It's not true. I'm actually a time traveller."
Gladys' expression did not change; she looked at me, then at Andrea, then back at me.
" … yeah, thought it was something like that," she commented at last. "Future, right?"
-ooo-
Andrea's jaw dropped in pure astonishment. Mine wasn't far behind.
"You – what – how - " I gasped.
"Lots of little clues," Gladys explained. "The whole 'pulled out of the ocean' thing was a big giveaway. No identification, no relatives looking for you. You speak subtly differently to everyone around you – well, now you don't, but two years ago, you did. You use different slang, but you know the layout of the city. And to anyone who really watches you at classwork, at ROTC, it's obvious that you've been through hell already, and you're preparing for it all over again. Plus, there's your choice of classes." She shrugged. "Simple, when you know what to look for."
"Holy shit," I managed. "When did you figure it out? Who else knows?"
She chuckled and shook her head. "I knew there was something strange going on, but I never actually connected all the dots until you told me, just now. And there's no-one who's spent as much time with you over the last two years, especially in stressful situations, as I have." She glanced at Andrea.
"She already knows," I hastened to assure her. "Also, Danny and Anne-Rose. I told them a little while ago. I just needed to tell you."
She smiled.
"Well, thanks for letting me in on it." Tilting her head toward the interior of the apartment, she asked, "So, does Nina know?"
I took a deep breath. "I haven't told her. But that doesn't mean that she hasn't figured it out on her own. She's very, very sharp." I looked at her. "Does Frank know?"
She looked steadily back at me. "Do you think he needs to know?"
I paused. "You're going to be married to the guy. Do
you think he does?"
She took a deep breath. "I … no, I don't. Unless it's actually life-threatening or whatever … no." She gave me a pleading look. "But if I ever decide that it's absolutely imperative that he knows – can I tell him?"
I grimaced. "Let me know that you're doing it, beforehand if possible, afterwards if not, okay? And let me know what he thinks about it." Implicit was the observation that I trusted her judgement. We hadn't gone through two years of JROTC together without learning to trust one another.
She nodded, once, curtly. "Will do."
I smiled. That was her field persona kicking in; efficient, concise, to the point. I hugged her; she returned it. "Thanks."
Andrea was looking from one of us to the other. "I got a question," she observed.
I turned to her, grinning. "Shoot."
"How come you two never got together? I mean, seriously."
I chuckled. "We
are straight, you know."
Andrea shrugged. "So? You two could be
so easily gay for each other."
Gladys cleared her throat. "When I was in high school, I got bullied by girls who accused me of being gay. Taylor rescued me. Ever since then, if I even had a passing thought about another girl, even about Taylor, I shut it down hard. The memories of what they called me were too painful. I had to prove them wrong."
"So you
could be gay," Andrea pointed out.
Gladys smiled and shook her head. "Nope. No repressed yearnings, here."
"Have you
tried it?" pressed Andrea.
I rolled my eyes. "Seriously? Are you gonna try to turn
all of my friends?"
"No, just the nice ones," Andrea returned with a giggle.
Gladys sighed. "I can see you're not going to let this go. Taylor, hold still."
I held still. Gladys leaned up and deliberately kissed me. Her lips were warm on mine; she wasn't as good a kisser as Andrea, and it sure as hell didn't give me the same sparks as the dream-kiss from the dream-Brian. It was nice, sure, but not fantastic.
The kiss ended; Gladys pulled back, her eyes thoughtful.
"Well?" demanded Andrea.
Gladys shrugged. "Nope. Still straight." She smiled. "Though it was nice to make sure."
"Maybe you should try with me," challenged Andrea.
Gladys shook her head. "I'll pass. I called your bluff and kissed Taylor. No result. I'm
not interested in girls. Okay?"
Andrea grinned. "Okay. You win."
"I'm kind of glad we don't have a thing for each other," I mused. "It would have made our field exercises a bit more stressful. Out on our own, with no-one to watch us … "
Andrea burst out laughing; Gladys grinned. "That
could have made it harder for us to kick their asses," she agreed.
The glass doors slid open again, and Nina joined us on the balcony. It wasn't all that large; with the four of us there, it was just a little crowded.
"Well, this party is starting to look interesting," she observed. "Or did I
not see Taylor kissing Gladys, just now?" She looked from one to the other of us, amusement on her face. "Is there something that I need to know?"
-ooo-
Gladys blushed; I came to her rescue. "No," I told Nina. "Andrea was of the opinion that Gladys and I should be a couple, given how close we are. Gladys proved that we weren't."
Nina nodded. "An understandable concept," she agreed. "And brave of you, Gladys, for taking that step." She tilted her head to one side. "What would you have done if you'd discovered that you
were attracted to Taylor?"
Gladys went blank. "I … I have absolutely no idea," she confessed.
We all burst out laughing; Gladys joined in a moment later. "It
would've been a bit awkward, wouldn't it?" she observed. "I mean, I love Frank, and I also love Taylor, but in a different way."
Nina nodded. "I'm sure you would have worked something out."
Andrea smirked. "I'm sure I could've helped."
I put my arms around her from behind and took her in a mock headlock. "I'm sure you would have just
hated that," I chided her.
She turned around in my arms and snuggled up to me. "Yup," she grinned up at me. "Kiss?"
I kissed her; Gladys and Nina watched with interest.
"Well, I'm gonna get back to the party, before Frank decides I've been kidnapped for a lesbian orgy," declared Gladys.
"See you in there," I agreed; she opened the sliding door and slipped inside.
"I have to admit," I mused, "for a party with only one lesbian in attendance, there's an awful lot of girls kissing each other."
Andrea looked up at me. "And what's wrong with that?" she demanded.
"Nothing, nothing," I reassured her. "Just making the comment."
"If you two want your privacy … " offered Nina.
I made my mind up. "Wait. There
is something you need to know."
She stopped in the act of reaching for the door. "Yes?" she asked.
I cleared my throat. "It's about me. Where I came from. Where I was, before I got pulled out of the water."
"You've remembered?" she asked quietly.
"More like I never forgot," I told her. "I'm sorry; I've been lying to you all this time."
She nodded slowly. "So I surmised. I have some theories as to why. I'd be interested as to which one is true."
"Oh, you've got to be shitting me!" burst out Andrea. "You
figured it out?"
Nina glanced down at her, smiling slightly. "You forget, Andrea, that I've known Taylor more or less since the minute that she was pulled out of the water."
"So tell me your theories," I suggested.
Nina nodded again. "There are several permutations, but they boil down to three options. You've travelled in time, or you've travelled between alternate worlds, or you've done both."
Andrea's jaw dropped; I spoke up. "So … you've pretty well ruled out a more mundane explanation?"
She nodded. "I've done some checking. You're not showing up on any database, anywhere. Your scars and injuries, such as that plug of aluminum in your shoulder, they don't match with anything I can find anywhere. So you're a child soldier from a war I never heard of, who somehow ended up knowing all about Brockton Bay, or … " She trailed off. "My personal preference is time traveller from the future. A dark future."
I shook my head. "Christ. How many other people have you told?"
She grinned tightly. "What do you take me for? I'm it."
I nodded. "Well, you're essentially correct. There's a dark future coming. I'm trying to prepare for it. Build resources. I have plans, but you'll understand if I don't tell you everything up front."
She nodded. "I understand. Is there anything I can do to help?"
I hugged her; it was so like her, to simply offer, just like that. "Not right this second, but if I ever do need your help … "
She hugged me back. "All you have to do is ask. You know that."
I kissed her on the cheek. "Thanks. I appreciate what you've done for me. More than you can know."
She held me at arms' length. "You've made something of yourself, Taylor. I only gave you a hand-up. I look forward to seeing what you do in the future."
I smiled wanly. "I can only hope that it's more than I managed the last time around."
She looked interested. "Care to share details?"
I shook my head slowly. "Not right now." I indicated the glass doors, and the people within. "Right now, we have a party to have fun at."
She inclined her head. "Indeed. Let's go do that thing."
We slid the glass doors open; with one arm through Nina's, and the other through Andrea's, I went back to the party.
-ooo-
Hours had passed. George had made his excuses and left; I had hugged him goodbye, to his gruff protestations. I noticed, however, that he didn't stop me.
The soda had come out, along with alcohol that Andrea had smuggled into the apartment; Danny and Frank had also brought some along as well. I asked if anyone knew how to make egg-nog; Nina declared that she knew a recipe. So we made a large quantity of egg-nog, and it made the rounds as well.
I was cautious with the drinking, recalling the last disastrous foray I had made into that world. Andrea reminded me that no-one was spiking my drink this time; I was still careful. I didn't like feeling that helpless, that far out of control.
I took a moment to look around, as we sat on the chairs and sofa that Andrea and I had purchased for the apartment. My friends, all the real friends I had in the world, were gathered with me to celebrate this day. They weren't the Undersiders; my father wasn't my father. I was struck with a burst of nostalgia, back to the dream-party that Lisa had hosted for me, and farther, two years and more, when I had been with Lisa and the others in their base.
We had been younger then, with bright dreams, unaware of just how fast the world was sliding into ruin. I had lost everything since then, and had been cast up here, in a Brockton Bay not my own. I'd had to start fresh, with no powers, dependent on the charity of strangers. The future lay spread out before me.
That I could change things, with the help of my friends, with Lisa's invaluable assistance, I was sure of. Whether the changes would be for the better …
that remained to be seen.
"Hey." I looked up, it was Andrea's voice.
"Hm?"
She leaned in and kissed me, her lips tasting of egg-nog. I was reminded of the last kiss from Lisa. "No brooding now. It's Christmas. Let's be happy."
I smiled and kissed her back. "Of course it is." Getting up, I went to the stereo. We'd been playing background music during Christmas dinner, soft and low, not loud enough to disrupt conversation. Now, I changed out the cassette for a different one.
"Everyone!" I called out. "Time for some Christmas songs!"
They all sat up, except for Danny, who was sprawled on the sofa with Anne-Rose draped over him; she was apparently feeding him popcorn with her lips. I clapped my hands; this time, they sat up as well.
"Are we ready?" I pressed Play, then went back to sit with Andrea.
The songs were ones we all knew; Jingle Bells, Silent Night, and so on. We sang loudly and with great enthusiasm, though not always in tune. Andrea squeezed my hand tightly while she sang; I put my arms around her.
And then the next song came on.
"
Should auld acquaintance be forgot, and never brought to mind …."
As the song went on, a lump grew in my throat. Tears stung my eyes, overflowed, blurred my vision. I could not see clearly, and it seemed that there were more people in the apartment than there had been a moment ago.
"
We'll take a cup of kindness yet, for the days of auld lang syne … "
I could not swear to it, but it seemed to me that my friends of old moved among the guests at my party.
"
Here's a hand, my trusty friend, now gie's a hand o' thine … "
They smiled at me and raised their glasses in a toast as the song moved to its conclusion.
" …
for the days of auld lang syne … "
Tears were streaming down my face; Andrea held me tightly.
I had no idea what the future held, but I knew that this would be our last good Christmas; our last good year. Before the next year was out, everything would be changed, irrevocably. With Behemoth in the world, the death and destruction would begin.
I stood; Andrea stood with me. As the tears cleared from my eyes, my old friends wavered and disappeared. I raised my glass to them anyway, toasting them silently.
Everyone looked at me expectantly. I cleared my throat.
"A toast," I told them. "To us."
"To us," they echoed.
"To the future."
"To the future."
I took a deep breath. "God bless us, every one."
As they echoed the last part, I sat down.
Because we're sure as hell going to need it.
End of Part 2-3