Authors: Caroline B. Cooney
They Never Came Back
If the Witness Lied
Diamonds in the Shadow
A Friend at Midnight
Hit the Road
Code Orange
The Girl Who Invented Romance
Family Reunion
Goddess of Yesterday
For All Time
The Ransom of Mercy Carter
What Janie Found
Tune In Anytime
Burning Up
What Child Is This?
The Face on the Milk Carton
Whatever Happened to Janie?
The Voice on the Radio
Both Sides of Time
Out of Time
Prisoner of Time
Driver’s Ed
Twenty Pageants Later
Among Friends
But the future isn’t a hat full of little shredded pieces of the past. It is, instead, a whirlpool of uncertainty populated by what the trader and philosopher Nassim Nicholas Taleb calls “black swans”—events that are hugely important, rare and unpredictable, and explicable only after the fact.
—The Wall Street Journal
For Beverly Horowitz, with whom I have worked on
thirty books, and whose friendship, conversation and
unpredictable ideas are a great joy in my life
M
ISSY
V
IANELLO AND
her mother were running errands. Mom was in line at the post office sending a package while Missy walked down the block to the dry cleaner’s.
The front door was propped open. Missy entered a large hot space, full of clothing, empty of people. The old-fashioned floor fans rotated slowly on their heavy metal posts. A radio sat on a sorting table. It was small and black with a long cord, and probably as old as her mother. It was tuned to a talk station. A doctor was chatting excitedly about babies.
Missy did not care for talk shows. Politics and angry raised voices did not attract her. Gentler topics—gardens to visit; diseases to worry about—offered nothing to a sixteen-year-old.
On the counter sat a small bell for customers to ring. Like the swirling fans, it was something from a schoolroom in another century. Missy had the odd sensation that she had fallen out of her own time. She tapped the little bell, which made a pleasing musical ding.
Missy was mildly impatient. Usually the couple who ran the shop were so attentive.
The interview on the radio station continued. At first, the doctor’s remarks stayed outside Missy, hanging there like the clean clothes dangling from ceiling racks. And then the meaning of his statements penetrated Missy’s mind. If there had not been a counter separating customers from the workspace, Missy would have snatched up the radio and pressed it to her ear.
She who had never given a thought to babies, who wasn’t interested in babysitting, who hadn’t even met any infants lately—she was stunned by what the doctor was saying.
The fact that had kept Missy safe, the fact that had allowed Missy to laugh at her crazy guesses for the last few years—was that fact a lie?
This doctor is an expert, she thought. He knows what he’s talking about. Or does he? Can I trust him?
A clerk she did not recognize hurried over, smiling, saying how are you, good to see you, but Missy, transfixed by the talk station, did not answer. The clerk took the small white ticket from Missy’s hand and went to find the clothes.
The interview ended. A new voice discussed weather. Missy found herself holding a stack of neatly folded, plastic-wrapped sweaters. She handed over the cash and even managed to say thank you. She left the dry cleaner’s. On the sidewalk, she could no longer hear the radio, but the words had come outside with her.
Missy Vianello had not fallen out of her own time.
She had fallen out of her life.
* * *
M
ISSY HAD NOT
slept well. Every time she lay down, some internal engine propelled her back off the bed. Half the night, she stood in the dark, while the facts of her life sorted themselves like a pack of cards being dealt. In school, though, she was surprisingly alert. The lines from the radio vibrated in her head, and yet she was able to participate in class and do her work. She felt weirdly multiplied by the new information.
By the time it was third period and biology class had begun, Missy’s energy was fading. Mrs. Stancil discussed fake science, describing a hoax in which the perpetrators aged bits of human skull and jawbone, buried the bone fragments and then arranged for them to be dug up. They convinced museums and anthropologists that these were the remains of an ancient humanoid. They called the “fossils” Piltdown Man and the world was enthralled by what seemed to be its new ancestor.
Maybe what Missy had heard on the radio was also pretend science. Maybe her new “fact” was as silly as Piltdown Man.
Mrs. Stancil adored classroom discussion. She was delighted when Graham argued with her. “I love archaeology,” he said. “I read about it all the time, and that hoax wouldn’t work, Mrs. Stancil. You’d test the bones for fluorine, uranium and nitrogen. You’d know immediately how old those bones were.”
“Now you would. But this was 1912,” explained Mrs. Stancil. “Those testing techniques were unknown.”
The class had only six weeks’ experience with Mrs. Stancil, but they knew already that she preferred projects that were
“outside the box,” and quickly tired of projects that were “in the box.”
In Missy Vianello’s mind, a hoax blossomed. She could see the entire hoax from start to finish. It would be cruel. But it would work. She said softly, “What hoax would you do, Mrs. Stancil, if you could pull one off? A science teacher would be so good at hoaxes. A scientist like you could offer a string of lies, but package them so believably that the public would accept your story as fact.”
The kids were on board immediately. “Let’s do a class hoax,” said Anthony. “We could pretend that a lamb bone from somebody’s dinner roast is the shin of a pterodactyl.”
“And get very scientific about it,” agreed Kelsey. “Buttress our claim with bone details, like porosity, and present the measurements of real pterodactyls, or pretend to, and establish that we have a match.”
“I think the hoax should be more trendy,” said Carlotta. “How about a fake alternative fuel for cars? We could print pages of chemical testing we haven’t done, and convince people we can make fuel from, say, pond scum.”
Mrs. Stancil was excited. “People! This is truly outside the box. If we format our project so that our research provides us with a deep understanding of the truth, it will be a fun approach. I like Carlotta’s idea. Corn is being used for ethanol, so it’s not outrageous that we too could create a vegetable fuel.”
“That’s not my kind of hoax,” said Zach. “I’d rather have a murder victim and convince people it was suicide and get away with murder.”
If Missy shouted her own idea out loud, the class would be impressed. But a hoax worked only when nobody suspected.
Nobody
, thought Missy, already feeling guilty; already aware that her hoax might destroy instead of reveal.
“I wouldn’t actually have a corpse,” explained Zach. “I’d just pretend to. I’ve seen at least a thousand TV shows with this plot, so I’ve pre-researched and I’m ready to go.”
“Let’s do hoaxes in groups,” said Emily. “People who like bones can be in the bone group, people who like murder can be in the corpse group and people who like fuel can be in the pond scum group.”
In science, what mattered was truth.
But in life? wondered Missy. What mattered most in life?
* * *
C
LAIRE
L
INNEHAN WAS
doing her homework.
Only six weeks into the school year, Claire loved all classes and all study. The textbooks still felt like treasures in which fascinating topics were waiting. Usually this feeling lasted through Thanksgiving. By December, when it got cold and dark early in the day, and she began hoping for snow and ski weekends and wanted to shop for more sweaters, the books felt used up; Claire would have mined the vein of gold that had been so promising and she’d be ready to move on.
Her cell phone rang. The ring tone was her cousin Missy’s,
but Claire would have known who was calling anyway. She and Missy could practically read each other’s minds. “Hi, Missy.” Claire settled in for a long talk. She and her cousin texted on and off all day long, but also had to hear each other’s voices at least once every twenty-four hours.
“Hey, Clairedy.” Missy had a very chipper voice; very upbeat. People said that Missy and Claire sounded exactly alike, but Claire disagreed. Her own voice was slower and deeper. “Listen,” said Missy. “I need an identical twin.”
Claire laughed. “Even on the Internet, Missy, there aren’t that many identical twins being auctioned off.”
“In biology,” said Missy, “we’ve been assigned to pull off a hoax.”
“Like filming Bigfoot? Or finding Paleolithic writing on a stone in your backyard?”
“Exactly. Here’s what I’ve decided for my hoax. Out of nowhere, like an asteroid in the night falling through my roof, I will suddenly meet my long-lost, totally unknown identical twin. Everybody will believe my hoax because I will bring my identical twin to school.”
Claire was giggling now. She never giggled with anybody but Missy. “When
I
took biology,” said Claire, who was a junior while Missy was a sophomore, “we learned
facts
. A hoax assignment is pointless. Guess what, Missy? This morning when Aiden and I happened to enter the building at the same time, he said hi to me. And then he smiled.” Arriving at high school at the same moment as Aiden had not been accidental. Missy
had been part of the planning. Discussion of boys was a major portion of the cousins’ nightly talks.
“Nobody cares about Aiden right now,” said Missy. “We care only about my assignment. You have to be my identical twin, Claire.”
There was a strong family resemblance between the cousins. When they were little, maybe seven or eight, Missy and Claire used to dress the same, wear their hair the same and loudly pretend to understand each other’s thoughts and finish each other’s sentences. “We’re twins!” they would lie to anybody paying attention. People didn’t fall for it, because Claire was taller and heavier, but the girls thought they had a great act. Their parents tired of it and put an end to the fake twin thing. Even now Claire’s mother could get bent out of shape if she perceived Claire copying Missy or the other way around.