“Breaking news,” the anchorwoman says. I set my bowl on the counter and my head flips around. There’s no fancy TRAGEDY IN THE TENDERLOIN graphic today. Instead, the first thing I see is similar-looking video footage of the apartment building ablaze against the backdrop of a dark night sky.
An apartment fire broke out in the Tenderloin district in the early hours this morning. Neighbors say they were awoken by a smoke alarm and helped all four residents of the apartment escape before the flames engulfed the building. Two children, their parents, and a neighbor are currently being treated at San Francisco General for smoke inhalation. All five are expected to be released later today.
I look over at Dad. He’s glanced up at the newscast here and there, but this time, he doesn’t set his yogurt container down or reach for the remote to turn up the volume. On screen, the anchorwoman never breaks to an on-the-scene reporter, because there is no on-the-scene reporter. Instead, the camera goes to a wide shot of the studio, and she turns to her coanchor, who flashes her most concerned expression. “A good reminder to check those batteries in your smoke detectors.”
The newscast moves to the fender bender that’s currently being cleared from the Bay Bridge. Dad doesn’t notice me staring at him, unable to speak or move or take in a good deep breath.
I did that.
“Do you remember that apartment we lived in when you were born?” Dad asks. “It was way out on the edge of the city. We moved to a different building when you were four, but when you were really little, your mom and I lived on the third floor of an apartment complex.”
I actually did that.
Now that I know the do-over was a success, I no longer feel the urge to keep every element of our conversation exactly the same as it was the first time around. Which is good, since I’m frozen in place, staring at him while I try to force my jaw back where it belongs.
“Your mom hated living on such a high floor. We had this rickety old fire escape, and I thought it was kind of cool, but she was always afraid of a fire breaking out and all of us having to use it. She’s still terribly paranoid about fires. Have you seen all the smoke detectors we have in this house?” He laughs. “She even makes me keep spare ones in the garage. Are you okay, Bennett?”
I have to speak. Now.
“I did that.” My voice shakes.
“Did what?”
“That,” I say, pointing lamely at the TV.
He turns and looks at it. “Oh? Really? I didn’t know that. I always thought that looked a bit dangerous.”
The newscast has moved on to a story about this Friday’s Critical Mass bike ride through downtown. “No. Not that,” I say, and Dad looks back at me quizzically.
I’d better talk quickly. If everything goes roughly the same way it did last time, I have about three more minutes before Brooke arrives. I want Dad to be the first to know what happened. I want to tell him while we’re alone.
I keep my voice low and strong. “Dad, listen to me. I did that over. The fire in the Tenderloin.” I gesture to the TV again, but he doesn’t look away from me this time. His eyes are locked on mine, hanging on every word. “We’ve been here before, and that story was different then. Those kids didn’t make it out of the fire. They died.”
My heart was already racing, but now that I’ve said the word “died,” it kicks into a whole new gear. My legs are shaking, so I rest a hand on the counter to steady myself. Dad looks at the TV, then back at me, then back at the TV. “What?” he asks.
“Those kids died. But I went back and changed what happened.”
Dad’s staring at me like I told a joke and he doesn’t get the punch line.
I give the kitchen a paranoid glance to be sure we’re still alone before I blurt it all out. “I came downstairs—just like I did ten minutes ago—and when I walked into the kitchen there was a news story about a fire in the Tenderloin that killed two kids. You didn’t say anything, but I knew you wanted to. And you probably thought I didn’t care, but I did.”
Dad pulls his glasses low on his nose and watches me over the top of them. “Later, we went sailing, and the next day we drove Brooke to the airport, and then I started school on Monday and, frankly, it was kind of a shitty day and I couldn’t stop thinking about those kids anyway so I thought…why not try it? I wanted to see if I could fix it. I wanted to know if I could stop it from happening the way it did.”
Dad opens his mouth to speak, but he stops. He looks at me for a full minute, his face contorting into new expressions the whole time. I’m waiting, watching him, holding my breath and trying to figure out what he’s thinking. Finally, his whole face relaxes. His eyes shine. I can tell he’s proud of me.
“Hey! You’re home!” I startle as Brooke wraps her arms around my neck and whispers, “God, it sucks here without you.” She takes two steps back and looks from me to Dad. “What’s up? You okay?” She rises to her tiptoes and pecks him on the cheek.
“Yeah, I’m okay.” Dad gives her a small smile, but he doesn’t look at me at all.
Brooke bounces over to the refrigerator and opens the door. She stands in the chill while she tries to decide what to eat.
Dad looks a little unstable. “We should get going soon. I’m just…” He trails off as he looks around the kitchen. “I’ll go see if your mom needs help.”
Brooke pours herself a bowl of cereal and lifts herself up to sit on the kitchen counter. “Okay, we only have a few minutes. Tell me everything.”
Exactly like last time, I speak in hushed tones, telling her all about Maggie and the reason there’s a photo of the three of us at the zoo, Emma and Justin’s breakup, and how the Greenes let me crash on their couch the first night. She sips her coffee, hanging on every word, and after I’ve given her a play-by-play of practically the entire trip, I lower my head and say, “There’s more.”
I tell her about two kids who were killed in a fire in the Tenderloin.
And then I tell her how they weren’t.
13
My second first day of school starts off differently. I don’t sit in the car, listening as the bell rings in the distance and wishing I could close my eyes and open them at Westlake. Instead, my car is one of the first ones in the student lot, and I’m one the first people in the building.
I head straight to my locker, drag the recycling can over and park it underneath the door, and scoop all the papers and granola bar wrappers into the bin. I give my locker one more sweep with my hand and I look inside. With the exception of the VANS sticker I put on the inside of the door freshman year, it’s as empty at my locker at Westlake was.
When the first bell rings, I’m already more than halfway across the quad. I open the door to my World Civilizations classroom and discover that it’s still empty, so I take a seat in the row closest to the window about halfway down the aisle, nowhere near McGibney’s desk.
I grab my notebook and a pencil from my backpack, and as I’m doodling, she walks through the door. She crosses the room and sets her briefcase down next to her chair. “Punctual,” McGibney says, and I look up at her.
“Excuse me?”
“You’re punctual,” she says plainly. “What’s your name?”
“Bennett Cooper.” I hold my hand up and she nods.
“Ah,” she says, and I can practically see the wheels turning, my mom’s ridiculous story clicking into place in her mind. “Welcome back, Mr. Cooper. I hear you have some catching up to do.” She says the words plainly and without a trace of the sympathetic stare I know I’ll be getting from the rest of the teachers today.