Fatherless: A Novel (22 page)

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Authors: James Dobson,Kurt Bruner

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Kevin paused
at his own front door, watching the vapor of his breath dissipate in the chilly midnight air. He would have preferred walking
through its threshold five hours earlier, the excited squeals of children greeting their daddy to put the icing on the cake
of an already amazing day. He imagined his darling wife waiting up for him, eager to hear about the big presentation. He would
have given her a long kiss in self-congratulation on a job well done mixed with gratitude for a better-than-expected outcome.

He knew, of course, that Angie and the kids would be sound asleep. So he stood beneath the dim glow of a single bulb, exhaling
long streams of misty joy into its light, a contented boy rewarding himself with small marvels.

Thank you
, he prayed in silence, smiling upward before reaching to unlock the door.

As expected, he entered a dark house. Placing his tablet on the entry table he moved toward the kitchen, hoping to find a
snack worthy of the moment. He opened the refrigerator to find the usual assortment of condiments, dairy products, and fruit.
Nothing exciting like leftover cake. Retrieving the half-empty carton of milk he opened the pantry to seek a perfect accomplice.
A box of Tommy’s favorite sugar cereal sat seductively at eye level. It was normally off-limits to Dad, but Kevin decided
tonight was different. This day deserved the simple reward of crispy flavor doused in fresh milk.

While relishing his third mouthful Kevin noticed the lovely form of his wife glowering in his direction. Her arms were crossed
sternly like those of a cop catching a burglar in the act. A guilty smile forced a drop of milk from the side of his mouth.
She laughed quietly and approached.

“What am I going to do with you?”

His eyes moved up and down to admire her thin nightgown. “I bet I can think of something.”

A tiny dimple showed beneath a slight blush. Angie slid behind Kevin and wrapped her arms around his back. “It went well today?”
she asked.

“Very well.” He moved the bowl aside and turned around on his bar stool to face her, slipping his hands around her waist and
pulling her body close. “So well I wanted to celebrate. I figured you were asleep so I settled for this bowl of contraband.
But you look much more appetizing!”

“Behave,” she pretended to protest. “First tell me what happened.”

He patted the stool beside him, inviting his wife to sit.

“I was given fifteen minutes to make my case and fifteen for questions,” he began. “But the questions and discussion stretched
into two hours!”

“Is that good?”

“I didn’t think so at first. There were lots of objections that became arguments. By the time I reached my allotted time I
figured the whole proposal was going down in flames. But rather than cut off the discussion to call for a vote, Anderson kept
extending our time. He would look toward Franklin—”

“Senator Franklin was there?” Angie interrupted.

“He was.”

“Did that make you nervous?” She reached over to rub Kevin’s arm.

“At first. I wanted to work through any committee objections before he saw it. But then I noticed Anderson making eye contact
with Franklin moments before each time extension. A slight nod cued Anderson to keep the conversation alive.”

“For two hours? I thought you said Anderson was a schedule stickler.”

“Exactly! I figured there was only one possible reason Anderson kept the conversation going. A quick vote would have killed
my idea. Franklin must have wanted me to overcome each objection.”

“Did you?”

“Enough of them to win the day.” His voice had a mock braggadocio’s tone. “You’re looking at a boy who spent his day defeating
giants!”

“Like Trisha Delisha?”

“She was the most vocal. No matter what I said she shot back a hostile, usually harebrained complaint.”

“I still don’t understand why that woman is in the coalition.”

“I’ll tell you why. She will become important when the time comes to go public with the austerity proposals. Franklin is no
dummy. He knows the medicine will go down much easier if presented by a spoonful of sugar like Trisha Sayers.”

An icy glare told Kevin Angie didn’t appreciate the analogy.

“Anyway, we got nine votes. That’s two more than we needed to include the bright spots concept in the final bundle of proposals.”

“Bundle?”

“I expect Franklin will want to present three or four big ideas to address the crisis, each targeting a different economic
segment. That’s how he’ll garner a broad base of support.”

Both sat quietly for a moment, Angie’s fingers squeezing Kevin’s in a show of pride in her husband’s accomplishment.

“What about the transition idea?” she asked.

“They cut me off at the knees on that one weeks ago. Trying to reduce transitions was a bridge too far.”

“I thought the whole idea was to replicate what happens in bright spot regions.” Her words seemed pregnant with concern.

“Politics is about getting what you can,” he said. “I got half of what I wanted. Franklin will propose a package that includes
tax credits for new parents. That’s a pretty big win that should make it easier to choose parenthood.”

A slight delay. “I’m sure it will. And you should be proud.”

“But?” he prodded.

“Well. I just wonder whether one bright spot trait will have much impact without the other. Are you sure increased fertility
alone will help? I mean, it took both of us to make a baby. Neither of us could have created a child alone.”

Kevin looked into Angie’s eyes, trying to decipher whether she was seducing him or instructing him.

“Isn’t it the combination of the two trends that creates economic strength? One without the other seems, I don’t know, like
a single spouse trying to create half a baby.”

The comment sobered Kevin’s celebration.

How could I have made such an obvious mistake?

It was a serious leap in logic to assume high fertility accounted for 50 percent of bright spots’ economic growth. It had
never occurred to him or to Troy, who usually thought of such things, that both were crucial parts of a single whole. One
without the other might be useless.

“I hadn’t thought of that,” he confessed dolefully.

Angie patted Kevin’s shoulder. “Well, let’s not worry about that now. Just because you have another battle to fight tomorrow
doesn’t mean we can’t celebrate today’s victory.”

She moved him sideways on the stool and climbed onto his lap to wrap her body tightly around his torso while touching the
tips of their noses together.

Their eyes met, hers sparkling with invitation, his submerged by apprehension.

“I should probably call Troy,” he said.

She took his hand and placed it on her thigh. “I think that can wait.”

He kissed her mildly.

“Kevin Tolbert,” Angie said while leaning away. “That’s not what I had in mind.”

She pressed her lips severely to her husband’s while guiding his hand higher.

Julia traded
her empty glass for a tiny pillow and neatly folded blanket. She had never been more grateful for an upgrade in her life,
which must have shown in her eyes as she thanked the flight attendant.

“Rough day?” he asked.

“Long day,” she responded. “Actually, long week.”

He smiled politely and offered a refill. She declined, hoping to use the three-hour flight home to drift into blissful unconsciousness.
As soon as Julia had found and occupied her first-class seat she felt the physical and emotional toll of the past few days.
Much of the adrenaline masking her tension ebbed, her body finally granting itself permission to enjoy a brief reprieve from
the stress of tiptoeing around a strained friendship, fighting desire for a charming gentleman, and maneuvering into a confidential
meeting of Washington insiders. A nap was just the thing she needed before tackling her next high-adrenaline task: beating
Monica Garcia to the editorial punch.

She recalled the sting of her rival’s presence at the austerity coalition meeting, wondering whether Monica had made the same
deal with Senator Franklin that Julia had made with Kevin, preemptive access in exchange for fair representation. Or had Monica
simply seduced her way into the good graces of a Franklin staffer, posing as an eager intern who would make a nice addition
to the growing harem? Either way, the game had changed.

As the alcohol began inviting her body to relax, Julia reminded herself of her opponent’s limited journalistic experience.
Monica could report the basic facts of a story well enough. But Paul wanted an article carefully nuanced yet unflinchingly
damning. Pulling that off would require more than naked ambition. It would take a Pulitzer-winning intellect.

She wanted to compile a mental list of story elements but her brain refused to help. Julia found the audio symphony channel
on the screen embedded in the seat in front of hers and closed her eyes while the London Philharmonic washed gentle waves
of beauty over her restless mind.

Five minutes or an hour later Julia felt herself gasp desperately for air, her limbs flailing frantically to counter the pull
of a waterless undercurrent. As before, it drew her downward. As before, the shadowy figure of a man stood unable or unwilling
to rescue her from a vortex she didn’t understand but knew to be evil.

Joyless laughter invaded her sleeping ears. At first she assumed it came from the figure fading in the distance, the man toward
whom she pleaded. But then she realized the sound rose from beneath. It was a vile and indulgent laughter, the kind that might
accompany the foul breath of a gluttonous man raping an innocent child or devouring a cannibal’s feast.

“Don’t leave,” she screamed toward the barely visible man in the distance, her heart pounding in her throat. “Please help
me!”

He made no move beyond extending a hand she could not possibly reach.

The texture of leather chafing the fingertips of her right hand woke Julia from the nightmare. Opening her eyes, she saw her
arm reaching toward Seat 2B eighteen inches ahead, the face of its occupant swiveled toward her in apparent irritation over
her disruptive thrashing.

“I’m sorry,” Julia said dimly while locating herself. “A bad dream.”

She turned left, grateful to see a vacant seat. Turning right, she spotted a blinking wing light cutting through an oppressive
external darkness. She found and tapped a faint blue icon on her armrest to kindle the overhead lamp. It took a moment to
notice Mozart’s Serenade No. 12 rising in her ears, the Chamber Orchestra of Europe attempting to calm Julia’s palpitating
heart.

She picked up the tablet resting beside her and quickly retrieved the document she had begun after visiting Maria’s therapist.

DREAMS: MAN, SHADOW, FEAR, ANGER, ABANDONED

DR. MORELAND: “I think your subconscious may be urging you toward something important…something to do with your dad…Talk to
someone who can help fill in your father’s face.”

She had captured and ignored the notes like an unpromising lead on a story she didn’t want to write.

The dreams reflect self-doubt and a declining career
, she told herself.
They have nothing to do with deeper conflicts or mysterious messages from my subconscious psyche
.

Or did they?

Julia added three words.

DESCENDING INTO HELL

While she stared at the phrase a slight shiver provoked her to squeeze the pillow tightly. Tapping a
TO DO
icon on the screen Julia reluctantly added “See Dr. Moreland again” to her list, a small action that gave her the sensation of retaking control.

Julia searched for something to occupy her mind for the remaining ninety minutes of the flight home. Three taps later she
weighed two options, the final journal entries of Sylvia Santos or the first of her son. She chose the file titled
ANTONIO’S MUSINGS
.

August 14, 2035
: Today I begin my journal titled Antonio’s Musings. Yesterday was my twelfth birthday. Mom and Jeremy got me this really
cool tablet that connects to my chair. It lets me type using only my good finger. I’m slow, but I’ll get faster. What else
do I have to do? I have a zillion thoughts cooped up inside my head. I can hardly wait to start writing them down. Thank you
for reading this, whoever you are. Brace yourself for the most amazing story ever. Mine!

August 15, 2035
: You probably want to know about my early life. It began pretty normal. Mom said I was a perfect gentleman as a baby. I hardly
ever cried. That’s good since she needed to rest up for the hard days to come. I still don’t cry much. Mom handles that for
the both of us. She tries not to let me see, but I know more than she thinks. I know Dad left because of me. I know she can’t
work overtime because of me. And I know she never remarried because of me. But she likes me anyway. I know that because I
see it in her eyes, not because she tells me. She would tell me either way.

For as long as I can remember we’ve enjoyed a word game Mom invented. She tries to stump me by reading a dictionary definition.
I get a point when I guess correctly and she gets a point when I’m wrong. I was winning 1236 to 843 before I lost the ability
to speak ten months back. We restarted the game yesterday to test-drive a voice replacement software Jeremy downloaded to
my tablet. She read “No longer in use or out of date.” I knew even before asking which half of the dictionary she was in.
I tapped out
OBSOLETE
and a computer voice spoke the word. Mom cried, I guess because she missed our game. I just glared at Jeremy who was laughing
hysterically because he chose a little girl’s voice. Mom made him fix it. Now I sound like a British intellectual. Much better.

You may already know that I have a rare disease. Did you know several famous people had a similar condition in the past? Look
up a guy named Stephen Hawking. He won the Albert Einstein Award for physics about fifty years before I was born. Hardly anyone
has the disease now. Parents deselect kids like me while still zygotes or embryos. I’ve often wondered what kind of child
Mom might have had if she had prescreened. Would Jeremy have a cute sister rather than an invalid brother? Would Dad have
stuck around? Would they live in a big house instead of this cramped apartment? One thing is sure. Mom probably wouldn’t have
invented our word game.

Antonio wrote two dozen entries that first month, some longer than others. Each provided a brief window into the mind of an
adolescent boy trapped in a mostly inept body. Julia learned that he loved an outdated robotics program he had received from
his mom’s friend, which sat idle after he lost his ability to steer a mouse. There were several comments she found surprising
but would have considered typical for any other adolescent boy. Inappropriate sexual daydreams about the few girls his brother
brought by the house. He shared how it felt when they recoiled at his appearance, politely shaking his twisted hand while
looking away to avoid eye contact. A few entries described life’s small pleasures, such as the taste of a banana-fudge milk
shake and the thrill of launching into the next book in his favorite fantasy series. His vocabulary and breadth of knowledge
suggested a keen intellect, perhaps someone who would have been a terrific copy editor or research assistant. They were abilities,
she discovered, he would put to use in short order.

May 10, 2036
: This morning Mom brought me with her to a meeting at the headquarters of Lance Lowman’s presidential campaign. It was so
cool! An important-looking woman explained different opportunities for volunteer participation. Get this—I’m now an official
online campaign specialist for the man we hope will become the next president of the United States. I send messages from my
tablet to a list of prospective donors. I ask them to make a $100 gift toward a major media effort the campaign hopes to launch
just before the election. I managed to send out ten this afternoon and then checked the system. Two of the ten already gave!
I’m going to try sending out a hundred messages per day over the next few months. I bet I can generate a hundred thousand
dollars all by myself! Mom says we need a person like Lowman in the White House to expand the boom and keep her in a decent
job. I asked Jeremy to help me get to bed early tonight. I can’t wait to get started tomorrow!

Julia remembered the national excitement over Lance Lowman’s campaign. He had managed to corral the enthusiasm of a nation
giddy over what turned out to be a short-lived economic boom. Even those living near the poverty line joined his bandwagon,
eager to accelerate the upward momentum. Lowman promised a decade of growth if his party took power. He would remove cumbersome
regulations to help the market capitalize on burgeoning gen-tech innovations, which, in turn, would lift all boats by raising
the water level of every segment of the economy. He also promised to reduce taxes that had mushroomed thanks to rapidly expanding
entitlement spending. Clearly, the Santos family believed every word.

Julia scanned several pages reflecting Antonio’s weekly tally of messages sent and donations generated. Then she camped on
an entry the now thirteen-year-old considered the most important of that year.

November 8, 2036
: We stayed up most of the night watching election results. Governor Lowman is now the forty-ninth president of the United
States. We celebrated by eating Mom’s famous chocolate chip pancakes before she went to work and Jeremy went to school. Nancy
(my day nurse) must have stayed up late too. She looks as groggy as the rest of us. But it feels great knowing I helped make
history.

That post-election euphoria set up the downward tipping point of Antonio’s short life. Within twelve months circumstances
began to undermine whatever sense of significance he had gleaned from Lowman’s victory. The gen-tech market crashed, throwing
his mom out of work and forcing the family to live with his aunt and uncle for six months. Jeremy hated the place. Got into
fights at school. Resented any input or guidance from Uncle Marcos who was “Not my father!” Antonio wished he could talk to
his brother about what both of them were feeling. But one sentence in an English accent every two minutes could not keep up
with Jeremy’s rapid-fire venom that was poisoning the household and breaking their mother’s heart.

Julia found only four quick journal entries from 2038, each suggesting Antonio had become increasingly pessimistic about life.

March: I’m starting to doubt Mom will ever get another decent job.

June: Mom said she had to take another pay cut. We’ll need to move.

July: The new apartment has a funky smell.

September: Poor Jeremy. He hates his new school even more than his last.

Julia filled in details with recollections from Sylvia’s journal. The family had moved into a low-rent apartment in a rough
school district where Jeremy continued to be mired in resentment. Things improved slightly when Sylvia began dating a man
from church who helped out financially from time to time. But the relationship went nowhere after the man spent time at their
apartment observing life with a severely disabled boy and an older brother angry with God and the rest of the world.

“Who could blame him?” Antonio wrote with resignation in November.

Antonio seemed to rediscover his Musings journal along with a new fixation in the early part of 2039.

February 7, 2039
: The president’s plan to save the economy seems to be gaining traction. He’s getting surprisingly little resistance in Congress
despite condemnation by the Vatican and a few Southern preachers. Mom says his proposal will never fly. But she’s been critical
out of spite ever since losing her gen-tech job. I read the details online last night. That took me about an hour. I think
I like it, a commonsense strategy for tackling the deficit and spurring new economic investment while allowing those brave
enough to do so to become part of the solution rather than part of the problem.

She continued reading, several entries providing progress reports on what would come to be called the Youth Initiative.

March 2, 2039
: The president’s plan passed an important subcommittee vote in the House of Representatives yesterday. It will go to the
full House in a few weeks.

April 10, 2039
: A senator from Texas proposed an amendment to the president’s plan, suggesting they should add two restrictions. Adults
must state they have volunteered free of coercion. Minors can only volunteer with the approval of all living parents. Both
were accepted as reasonable changes.

May 17, 2039
: Someone labeled the Senate version of the president’s plan the
Youth Initiative
because, in theory, it should lower the average age of the US population. The media keeps using the label, so I think it
will stick.

June 21, 2039
: A historic week. The Youth Initiative passed both houses of Congress by a two-thirds majority. Economists are already projecting
significant savings and growth.

August 30, 2039
: The first month of the Youth Initiative brought an unprecedented transfer of wealth. A high percentage of recipients say
they plan to use the money to pay off debt. But some recipients are entrepreneurs who, it’s assumed, will invest in new businesses
to grow the economy.

September 30, 2039
: NEXT Inc. announced that it plans to purchase and renovate vacant office buildings in major markets over the coming months
in order to open clinics specifically designed to serve the growing demand for transition services. The program has proven
more popular than expected and the supply of doctors willing to facilitate the process simply can’t keep up. NEXT said they
plan to hire attending physicians supported by a team of transition specialists rather than continue directing people into
existing doctors’ offices and hospitals.

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