“Okay,
you expect to live until you’re eighty--that’s fair,” Kendra encouraged. “Personally, I hope we make it to one
hundred, brain intact, but we can work with eighty. You will graduate high school in the middle of next year,
when you’re fourteen-years-old.
Roughly what percentage of our life remains?”
“I
do?” LB squinted at her in
disbelief.
Kendra
looked at her young, over-confident, incredibly vulnerable self. “Yeah, you do.” She smiled a little. “I’m nineteen. We get through college in
two-and-a-half years, then start the PhD program in physics. I’ll finish four months from now,
provided I finish my dissertation.”
“Is
that the time travel stuff?”
“No,”
Kendra said with relish. “Time travel
is what will make us rich.”
“All
right!” LB sat on the edge of her
seat. “I’ll have 82.5% of my life…our life…left when I graduate high school,
and I’ll be rich.”
“Right. Eventually. I hope. If your
grades improve enough to get into Stamford.” Kendra then proceeded to decimate every argument that LB
could make for the importance in her young life of her current bunch of
friends--or of any friends, for that matter.
“Come
on,” objected LB. “You must
have friends. You’re me, and I’d
be lonely without them.”
“You
recover.”
“But
who do you talk about LA Nights with? I know I’d never stop watching that.”
Kendra
stared at the girl in disbelief.
“You don’t have time to watch TV.
You should have stopped that last week.”
“But--”
“Do
you or do you not want to figure out time travel?”
“So
we can be rich?”
“Yeah,
but more for the beauty of the science involved.” Kendra felt her eyes sting. Did she really still believe in the passion and purity of
science? An industrial spy was
after her! She shook her head and
willed her tears away before they formed enough to fall.
Maybe
she did need a friend, but if her younger self didn’t understand the passion
for knowledge that drew her on, who else would? Who could she trust?
Kendra thought of the new menace she’d felt from the night shadows on
campus and shivered.
She
felt a hand on her shoulder, and jumped.
“What’s
wrong?” Elle pushed Kendra’s
shoulder back gently, trying to get her new mentor to look up at her. “You are lonely, aren’t you?”
Kendra’s
eyes stung again. Years later,
when she looked back on all that she had done, she would always blame all that
came next on her own emotional weakness.
In the half-light that followed dawn, whether mentally dulled by sleep
deprivation, or simply too alone, she blurted, “No, I’m not lonely. I’m hunted.” The silence that followed was broken in her imagination by
the hollow gong of destiny.
Someone groaned. Kendra
realized that the sound came from her.
“What?” Elle scurried into bed, drew her knees
to her chest, and pulled the covers as close to her chin as she could get
them.
Great,
thought Kendra. She’d scared the
kid. To have such a parental
thought made her laugh, but it may have been despair, so much depended on her
younger self.
LB
looked at her like she was crazy.
“Why are you laughing? Is
someone chasing you or not?” The
false bravado faded the instant after it had been expressed. “Will the hunter follow you here?”
Kendra’s
smile froze. “No one else knows
how to travel in time, not yet anyway.”
“Then
how can we be rich?”
“What
do you mean?” Kendra asked, genuinely puzzled.
“Well,
if you’re hunted in your time, then it must be some kind of crucial point, like
you’re about to sell the secret of time travel or something. Time travelers who want to beat you to
it should be stepping out of the woodwork about now.” Elle glanced nervously around her dimly lit room.
Kendra
hung her head, ashamed that she’d brought the potential for danger to
Elle. They were in a
crucial time. If LB didn’t pull it
together and start to innovate math and physics, then her own ability to travel
in time was in jeopardy. She felt
her stomach lurch, and wondered if something had just changed in her own
timeline.
“Okay,”
Kendra said, “I suppose you’ll be safer if you know who to watch out for.” She proceeded to tell Elle everything
that had happened since Xenopoulos appeared in her life. LB listened without interruption. Kendra regretted that lack of
interruption by the time she’d finished the story. If her younger self had broken in, then Kendra would have
had time for the second thoughts that plagued her then.
“I
have to go. I should never have
come.” She looked at the
frightened girl. “You can do this. Work hard. Trust your questions.
If your teachers don’t understand them, find better teachers, but don’t
talk to strangers--at least not to Xenopoulos or Matt.”
LB
nodded, uncertain. Each regarded
the other with silent intensity for a moment, and then LB’s face lit up.
“I
know who could help us!”
“Who?”
“A
vampire!”
Kendra
exhaled impatiently, and rubbed her tired burning eyes. “You’ve got to stop with fiction and
fantasy. You don’t have time.”
“I-I-don’t
think it’s fantasy,” stammered the girl as she scrambled out of bed. “Look at this.” She pulled a notebook from her
bookshelf and shoved it at Kendra.
Kendra
opened to the first page. It was
filled with an equation, a quirky use of the logistic difference equation, but
the population represented looked like Matt’s equation. “What is this? Nothing in nature behaves like this.”
“I
know. They’re nearly immortal, but
through the ages the pograms against them have checked their population, until
now.”
“It’s
an elegant curve, but vampires don’t exist.” Kendra closed the notebook, and held it out to Elle.
“Look
at the second page, and the rest of them.”
“Listen,
the math and imagination you show in here,” Kendra gestured with notebook she
still held outstretched toward Elle, “is great, but--”
The
intensity of the girl’s stare stopped her. Kendra sighed and looked at the second page of the notebook,
then the third and the fourth.
When she’d finished all twenty-one pages, she stared at Elle. “You…you proved the existence of
vampires,” she stammered, “or some sort of non-indigenous being that preys on
humans.”
“Thank
you very much.” Elle gestured with
both hands, as if she spoke to an adoring audience. She was too pleased to remember to keep her voice down.
“Kendra?”
their mother called through the door, and then knocked. “Are you all right in there?”
The
door began to open. Panicked, Elle
met Kendra’s eyes.
Kendra tossed the girl her notebook, and pressed the fob in
her pocket as she spun on the floor of LB’s room. She thought she heard, “ But I didn’t tell you where to find
them…” as the girl’s bedroom vanished in swirl of blurred motion.