Resonance by J. B. Everett (books for 7th graders .TXT) đ
- Author: J. B. Everett
Book online «Resonance by J. B. Everett (books for 7th graders .TXT) đ». Author J. B. Everett
âIf you want.â
Her little head nodded vigorously. âI can learn to be a biologist.â
âFrom what I hear, you already are.â His hand settled on the small red head, and he managed to do it without coming across as condescending.
They said a few goodbyes and Jordan made it clear that he needed to get Jillian back right away, although that was a pile of crap as far as she was concerned. But on the way back she put her head on the windshield and curled into the car door.
Jordanâs hand was rough on her shoulder. âDonât you dare go to sleep. Donât even think about it.â His eyes looked out over the road but his attention was on her, she knew. âYou are not going under on my watch.â
Becky sat virtually still in the heated tent as she shuffled through the composition books she had dragged from home. The house hadnât felt quite so cold or lifeless when she had gone back this morning, and wound up having an hour and a half all to herself. Maybe it was because she and David had been through there.
Maybe because she had accepted that the house no longer answered her back.
The notebooks, too, felt useless.
All the creatures in them had survived. The Warblers were thriving, and in the right place. The bees were still making the weird columns in Los Angeles. All her frogs were out and hopping: in her own backyard and in McCann. And she had to wonder what the hell it was all about. Why did they mutate? And would they ever know just what the effects were? And since the shifts only happened once every 60 million years or so, there was no real scientific need to find out.
But they did have to find out what the hell was happening to Jillian and David. Maybe there was a connection between what was happening to them and the frogs and other amphibs. The shift had taken a different toll on some species. Maybe it was doing the same to Jillian and David. And in the meantime it was taking its toll on Becky, too.
The mirror in tent 43 revealed the blue marks under her eyes. Initially only smudges, they had bloomed to full on bruise-like shades in the last twenty-four hours. Jillian passing out at the morgue had shocked a solid ten years onto Beckyâs age. Just when she thought everything had stabilized - hell, the frogs had righted themselves even - Jillian managed to scream herself into a coma.
Luckily David had caught her. Becky had her wonderings if it was because he felt something for the dark-haired doctor or if it was because he didnât. She couldnât read him. And wasnât sure she wanted to.
Then he had slipped away in the car on the ride home. That had put another ten years and two shades of pale on her face. If she added it all up she just might need to start smoking.
Dr. Jordan Abellard had died early.
David Carter was under, and so was Jillian Brookwood.
And she sat here, staring into space, because she had gotten tired of watching the clock move, sleeping in the straight-backed chairs, and fearing the ever-present slowing of the heart monitors.
The last two were slipping away, of the four who had initially discovered the reversal.
So she was here. The only survivor.
The day sent sun streaming in through the pores of the tent, making the desk lamp into a simple waste of electricity. The heater worked overtime, even though hot spots formed on her jeans clad legs where patches of sun filtered down to her. But she shivered.
Maybe when her folks showed up.
Maybe then sheâd start to right herself.
âBecky?â
The voice was soft and familiar even if she didnât place it, and Becky turned to see who had approached through the open tent flap behind her, and let out the same ghastly sound that had come from Jillianâs throat at the morgue.
Jillian Brookwood stood upright in the doorway, the straightforward expression and blue scrubs not any sort of indicator of whether Becky was having a hallucination or seeing the real person.
Jillian didnât respond. She couldnât. She was being jostled by the doctors and techs who came to check out the unearthly sounds emanating from tent 43. Becky closed her mouth, having developed a sudden fear that she, too, could scream herself into a coma.
Jillianâs frown at being jostled around and shoved aside was all too appropriate, and Becky lost the fears. Shoving the techs out of the way, she engulfed Dr. Brookwood in a too-familiar hug.
âWhen did you wake up? You seem fine! How are you feeling? Do you want to sit down?â
Jillian just waved away all the concerns and looked Becky in the eyes and smiled. Her grin revealing even teeth and a dimple. Her eyes nearly glowed and Becky wondered what was up.
She was baffled as Jillian shooed the others out of the tent, closing the flap behind them, before forcing Becky to sit.
âYouâre going to think Iâm crazy-â
Becky had to interrupt. âTrust me. At this point there is no crazy.â
âWhile I was under I figured it out.â Jillianâs eyes flashed: she knew something, and Becky knew that she would, too, in just a minute.
âYou are the only person I know who could âfigure something outâ while comatose. So what did you discover?â
Settling her hip on the desk, Jillian spoke and Becky absorbed. âDuring the time when everyone was under the earth shifted. It split. Not in half âŠâ She gestured like slicing an orange, then waved a hand while she searched for words, which was significant in and of itself. Jillian was never at a loss for the right word. âThere are two places now. Identical. Maybe two whole earths.â
This time Jillianâs hands found purpose. She wrapped them around an imaginary ball, fingers entwined, then pulled her hands apart, leaving her fingers in place. Her motions now showed her holding one of her imaginary earths in each hand. She shook her head at Becky, âI donât know where the other earth is, but Iâve been there. I think theyâre actually in the same place,â her hands gestured as though the two little earths melded, âBut in different ⊠I donât know the word âŠ
ârealmsâ?â
Becky followed and Jillian must have gauged something from her face, for her eyes scanned once then she continued. âSo the people who died here, woke up there.â She gestured as though she still held small planets in her hands. âAnd those who died there-â
âWoke up here.â
âI donât have it all worked out, but I am certain people canât exist in both places at the same time.â
âSo in order to wake up here, they had to die there, and vice versa.â That was the logical tail, Becky knew, and in confirmation, Jillian nodded. Her thoughts turned over, and for once Jillian waited for someone else to draw their own conclusions. Becky didnât stop to wonder why she had been granted this rare privilege. âSo, on the other side there are otters? But no frogs? No honeybees?â
Jillian shrugged, her blue scrubs revealing the sharp curve of her shoulders, and Becky realized that the doctor had lost weight. But even as thin as she was, she had shucked her jacket first thing when sheâd come into the tent. And only now did Becky reach out the short distance to turn down the heat. Only now did she feel a little less cold herself.
But Becky saw right away that Jillian wouldnât wait for her feelings to catch up, so she tuned into Jillianâs voice, already in progress. â-donât know about the otters but we have all the animals that were having troubles before the reversal.â
Becky felt one eyebrow rise, âAnd you know this how?â
âBecause when we went back under, David and I woke up there.â
Becky wanted to release the sigh she was holding back, but years of southern manners forced her to retain it. âOf course you did, otherwise how would you have figured that out? I bet David fell down the steps there, too, but what about-â
Becky gasped as the air was forced out of her by way of a merciless hug from Jillian. She had blinked and missed seeing it coming - only suffered the feeling of having the wind knocked out of her.
But Jillian didnât apologize; she shined. âYou are so much smarter than the boys. Even after I explained the whole thing, they still didnât believe me!â
Becky shoved aside the sinking feeling that Jillian was serious, and ignored the dance of joy.
âThe boys?â
âJordan. Landerly. Davidâs there now.â Jillian had answered straight up, but her brain wasnât engaged with Becky. It was on its own track and further into the conversation than Becky was. And for a brief moment she wondered how Jillian could do that.
But because it was Jillian, who would take the conversation and run, Becky pushed through another round of thoughts and tried to give credence to the theories. âIf all the animals that were abnormal before the reversal survived both here and there, then maybe they were reacting to it. Preparing in some way.â Jillian nodded, and Becky dove in with her objection. âBut where did you get your list? I donât know if anyone had as comprehensive a list as I do.â
Jillianâs eyes twinkled again. âWe have your list⊠. well, on the other side they do. We got it yesterday. Seems a kid talked her way through to getting Landerlyâs cell number and called him up posing as a biologist-â
âMelanie?!â Becky felt her whole body lean forward, and even as the name tumbled from her mouth, she knew sheâd be devastated when Jillian said ânoâ.
But Jillian was nodding before the word was through. âShe said she was Doctor Melanie Sorenson. Said she had your notebooks and that you would want the CDC to have them. That sheâd found them in the house.â
âIn the house?â Everything had made sense up until that.
âThey came back a day or two ago, and yesterday afternoon Jordan and I drove out to get them.â
Beckyâs belly clenched. âDr. Abellard? You two drove to my house? But I was there this morning!â She paused as it washed over her. She wouldnât see Melanie ever again. She wasnât going to slip into a coma and find the missing pieces of her family. âBut I was here.â
Again Jillian nodded, her head looking like the little bobble dogs everyone had in the back windows of their cars, what with the incessant nodding and the grin. The funny image kept Beckyâs tears at bay. It helped that Jillian didnât see how she felt and just kept talking. âWe met her and your hunky older brother Aaron. They came back and he decided they should stay.â
âAaron.â The name rolled off her tongue in some sort of homage, but she was too mentally busy to figure it out. âOf course heâs not here, heâs a lawyer.â
Jillian almost cackled. âYou know, it took me hours to convince Abellard and Landerly that people were sorted by their occupations. And they still didnât begin to get any of it until David woke up pissed off about being casted from hip to toe.â With a sad smile she changed the topic with no segue, but Becky followed her.
âMelanie said she was going to go to that magnet school you suggested, that it didnât matter if she had to ride the short bus.â
With that the constriction in her chest expanded saturating every part of her. Creating pressure inside until it forced its way out in tears and sobs. But she didnât know what she cried for. Because she was happy they were alive. Or because, no matter where they were, they were still gone from her world.
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