“How’d you get away? Or did he let you go?”
I stood up, leaned against his door. I could make it, I thought. I could get away. I was not going to let him trap me inside that Cadillac again. But he wasn’t making any effort to stop me.
“Let me go home. I’ll call you tomorrow,” I said.
“All right. Do that. Why didn’t anyone call when you were missing, Jack?”
“You said you were only going to ask me two things.”
“I did. That was number two.”
He shifted in his seat. I could hear him leaning across, getting closer to where I stood. And he said, “Look at that. I guess they’re doing a missile launch or something at Vandenberg.”
I glanced back at him, then to the spot he was pointing at in the sky.
“You ever seen shit like that, Jack?”
“No.”
This isn’t happening.
There was a hole in the sky; the same green-gray slash I saw from the roof of Quinn Cahill’s fortress, raining glowing dust, a waterfall of dead light.
“That’s something,” he said. “I never saw it go off like that.”
My phone started buzzing in my pocket.
Or maybe it wasn’t buzzing, I thought.
I couldn’t take my eyes off the hole in the sky.
“Aren’t you going to answer that?” Avery Scott was staring at me.
“Fuck ’em,” I said.
I shut the door and walked away.
* * *
This is not real.
This is not real.
* * *
When I opened the door to my truck, the phone in my pocket began buzzing again, crawling around against my skin.
I have to get out of here.
I got in, slammed the door, locked it.
Conner was calling.
“Con.”
“Where are you?”
He sounded sick.
“In my truck. What’s up?”
“I’m here. I think I’m in my room. I’m fucking sick again.”
I waited.
“What do you mean?”
Then Conner said, “Marbury.”
“We fucked up.”
“Big time.”
I could hear him coughing, like he held the phone away from his face. Conner was throwing up.
“Did you see the sky?”
“Huh?”
“Go look at the sky.”
On the other end, I could hear movement, the sound of Conner getting to his feet, a door opening, taking steps, then another door. And Conner said, “That’s the same shit that was in the sky in Marbury.”
“I saw it.”
“I don’t think we’re going to get out, Jack.”
“I know.”
Neither did I.
ten
He was waiting for me in the dark, in front of his house.
I knew it was Conner as soon as I saw his eyes.
We hugged, and he slapped the back of my head, and I swear I thought I could almost feel him starting to cry. Maybe he was laughing. Conner would never cry over … what? Being lost?
He’d been in Marbury for more than a week, he said, but the rest of us weren’t “there” yet, and he’d popped back here once, too, but this wasn’t Glenbrook.
And it was so hard to get out.
It’s what I figured.
I wondered if Ben and Griffin could be safe, wherever they were.
They’re in a fucking garbage can.
Time to fill things in, replay the pictures I never thought had been taken.
* * *
Conner and I sat in my truck. Through the windshield, we watched the little light show in the sky, a pulsing ghost of a stab wound that tore through our universe.
So I went first.
I told him everything I could remember since swinging that hammer at our lens—about waking up in the garage and Ben throwing me out, the rainstorm, finding the dead people in the house where Conner had written messages for me on the wall. I told him about the black slugs, too, and all the while he nodded his head. Finally, I told him about Quinn Cahill and how I’d stolen food from him and escaped at night when the Rangers showed up—that I was intending to bring it to Ben and Griffin, but I went home first, and next thing I knew, I was here, in another Glenbrook that wasn’t Glenbrook.
But I couldn’t bring myself to tell about Ben and Griffin, what Freddie had done to them.
We were not going to stay here. Not in this world. I’d already made my mind up about that, and I was pretty sure Conner had been thinking the same thing, too.
He didn’t need to know about the cop.
“But I just don’t get how I can wake up in that garage and you were already there for like a week or something. And Ben and Griffin haven’t landed yet. Or, if they did, they’re not in Marbury with us,” I said. “And they aren’t here, either.”
“I never figured out any of this shit. One day, one second, one month.” Then he said, “So, how’d you get here?”
I pulled the glasses out from under my seat, and Conner stared at them, his mouth hanging open.
“Damn. Those look like the same lenses from Seth.”
“This little green one is what does it. When you flip it over the bigger one there, that’s what brought me here.” Then I thought of something. I looked at my friend. “How did you get here?”
Conner pressed his lips into something that wasn’t a smile. I could see how he was biting the inside of his cheek. “You remember how Seth left those other lenses? Two blue…” He pointed at the eyepieces on the glasses in my hand.
“Yeah?”
He shifted in his seat and looked away from me. “I didn’t tell you. I took one of them from your room. A long time ago.”
At first, I felt myself getting mad at him. He wasn’t supposed to take one. That wasn’t how we did things.
And, as if he understood what I was thinking, Conner said, “I’m sorry. I didn’t want you to get messed up again, Jack. I had it in my pocket, the day we were in the guys’ garage. It must have disappeared or something when I went through. But I had that one broken piece. That’s what did it. But it never worked right, and everything’s been getting crazy fucked up. Maybe that’s why Seth brought you to these glasses.”
The light in the sky faded, then pulsed bright green again.
“It’s like you can see stuff falling through that hole,” I said.
“I don’t know what that is,” Conner said. “But I’m pretty sure we had something to do with it.”
And I kept replaying in my head all those times Quinn Cahill tried telling me I’d fallen out of the sky.
“Everything’s different. Before … when we went to Marbury, the lenses never came through. It was only us. Did you think about that, Con? Now, the broken lens is in that other Marbury, and these other lenses are here, coming through with me.”
Conner shrugged and shook his head.
I said, “It makes me wonder. Maybe we’re trapped. Maybe wherever the lenses are is the real world now.”
Conner looked ahead. His fingers nervously tapped the armrest beside him. “I think it’s all Marbury. I think this is Marbury, too.”
“We have to get the kids out, Con. We have to get out of the hole.”
He didn’t say anything.
“Okay, Con. Then you tell me. What’s going on there, and what do I need to do when we go back?”
“What if we can’t get back?”
“I’m not going to think about that. But we’re not staying here. We can’t.”
“I know.”
So, maybe he did know what was going on with me, the cop, Ben and Griffin. Maybe he found his own fucked-up little rearrangements, too, and he didn’t have the balls to tell me about it. And maybe my friend just didn’t want to say the words, that we just might have been trapped for good this time.
CONNER’S STORY [1]
I woke up sitting on a horse in the middle of a rainstorm.
It was the craziest shit I’ve ever seen.
Can you imagine? Blink. You shut your eyes inside a garage, and when you open them, you’re dressed in some kind of uniform on top of a stinking horse, totally drenched, holding on to a shotgun, riding along with a group of guys no older than kids, all of us looking for something to screw, eat, or kill.