Timestorm (4 page)

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Authors: Julie Cross

Tags: #Romance, #Action & Adventure, #Time Travel, #Teen & Young Adult, #Literature & Fiction, #Science Fiction & Dystopian, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Science Fiction

BOOK: Timestorm
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I knew this already, but thinking about Thomas’s bringing a child into the world under those pretenses left me completely disgusted. I had to change the subject. “So … you were only fifteen and you had to leave home. That sucks. And living with Thomas, what was that like?”

Blake’s eyebrows lifted. “You ready to hear more?”

I nodded. There was never any way to stop my curiosity when it had latched on to something. I had no idea what Blake wanted me to get from this info, but I wanted to know about this world where time travelers naturally occurred and were worshipped and adored by all. That would have made my life a hell of a lot easier. Except the living-with-Thomas part.

The audio robot began again and I watched the words on the screen, reading them quickly.

DECEMBER 14, 2873.
AUDIO RECORDING BY HOST.

Everyone has been so nice to me this past week, even the navy-suit workers. Well, they aren’t exactly nice, but they’re not mean either like when they first came to my house after my mom’s call. The scientists in the lab, the ones taking all my data and doing test after test, have bent over backwards to get me everything I need
and
a whole bunch of stuff I don’t. Thomas keeps asking how I’m doing, telling me how special I am, that he was seventeen years old before he did his first time jump, and before me, he was the youngest reported time traveler in history. So, not only am I one of a handful in the world who can travel through time, I’m now the youngest, at fifteen, ever to time-travel.

Thomas thinks in another thirty or forty years, we’ll have small children who can time-travel. I know he’s twenty-five and much older than me, but still, I don’t ever spend time guessing what might happen in thirty or forty years. Thomas is like that, though. He sits in on conferences with all the other scientists working for the government, studying the Tempus gene, and it’s like he’s one of them. I’m so behind. And so immature. Thomas is very well respected among the entire crew of government workers. He has this aura that shines the minute he walks in a room. I need to work harder, to study more, so that Thomas and the others will have just as much respect for me.

A couple of days ago, I met two of the other travelers: Nora and Jean. They live in our building downtown. Nora is twenty-six and Jean is eighteen. Jean has the brightest red hair and green eyes I’ve ever seen. Thomas says it’s a sign that these physical traits could be a future indicator for identifying time travelers before their first jump. I just think she’s really pretty which means, like with all the pretty girls at my former school, I’m going to have a lot of trouble talking to her. Nora is super nice and almost motherly to Jean, and now to me, too. So, even though she’s also very attractive, I don’t have any trouble talking to her because she reminds me of my own mother and fits a little better into that category than any other.

So far, I’ve been showered with gifts, expensive clothing (brand-new, not handed down from my brothers), the most amazing entertainment devices that my family could never afford, not to mention the food … better and larger in quantity than anything I’ve ever had before. But I still miss my family, my friends, my hometown, my school and all its quirks. Thomas says it’s best to sever contact, at least in the beginning, but I really wish there was a way to have both worlds.

I wonder if they miss me, too?

*   *   *

“Every time I’ve seen Thomas,” I said once Blake had frozen the words again, “he’s been much older than twenty-five. Probably thirty or thirty-five. Maybe even a little older. When did he change? He seemed all right at twenty-five.”

Blake stared over my shoulder, deep in thought. “It wasn’t like you’d think, a sudden shift due to one influence. I think he was always working toward a different goal than everyone else, but his ideas, his theories and views of the world were so close to being right and yet so wrong at the same time that I couldn’t see it, not for a while. And as he got smarter and more powerful, more respected, it made changing our system easier.”

“Lots of gray areas,” I concluded. “That’s why you can’t pinpoint one moment that made everything go wrong. Sometimes I wonder if time travel is wrong, and by wrong I mean unethical. I know your ability evolved naturally, but just because we all have the capability to murder someone doesn’t mean we should do it.”

“I agree a hundred percent,” Blake said.

“Where are Jean and Nora? Why aren’t they trapped here?”

“Jean’s infatuation with Thomas led her to follow him. But I know deep down she doesn’t share his beliefs,” he said. “And Nora … I don’t know exactly where she is but Grayson does and I’m pretty sure she’s safe.”

The words moved again as the computer voice said the date.

FEBRUARY 1, 2874.
MEMORY EXTRACTED FROM HOST.

Thomas grasped my arm and I could almost feel the weight of his effort—the brainpower it took to make this kind of jump and take me along in the process. I felt the warm air before I even opened my eyes. Then I heard it. Both Thomas and Dr. Ludwig, who’s sort of like our brainpower coach, prepared me for the noise, but I had no idea it would be this loud.

Cars. I’d read about them in the education files on my computer, but seeing them move so recklessly, people running in front of them, I wasn’t at all prepared.

“It’s chaotic, isn’t it?” Thomas said, releasing my arm and then resting a hand on my shoulder.

“I don’t even know what to look at first.”

He pointed to a building right in front of us. The sign on the outside said
NYU MEDICAL CENTER
. “This is the 1987 version of a medical-treatment facility.”

“Okay, but what are we doing here?”

Several people darted around us as we stood in the center of a sidewalk, throwing us dirty looks as if we had ruined their day by slowing them down.

“Don’t worry about them,” Thomas said. “You’ll never see any of these people again. And to answer your question, this is why we’re here.” He pulled several small vials of a cloudy white substance from his pants pocket and held them out for me to see before stowing them away again. “You understand how the Tempus gene works, right?”

“Yeah … I mean, mostly,” I stammered, still distracted by the honking and screeching going on around me. I fought off the urge to cover my ears. “It’s not here in this year, right? Not a fully formed Tempus gene, anyway. It’s first discovered in the year…”

“2234,” Thomas finished for me, not carrying one bit of the condescending tone some of the navy-suit workers had whenever I didn’t know the answer to a question they asked. “But it took all the way until early 2800 for time travel to show up and that woman was thirty-four when she discovered her ability. You and I are proof that the gene is evolving over time. Eventually, the entire human race may possess the ability to time-travel and possibly at an age even younger than fifteen.”

“Wait.” I’d known there were still two remaining time travelers I had yet to meet, but I hadn’t really thought about the age difference being so huge. “One of us is that old? Is she still alive?”

Thomas grinned. “Stick with me, kid, and you’ll get the real answers. And no, she’s not alive anymore. She passed away a couple years ago. And the Tempus gene shows up in our history maps in earlier years because of missions like this one. But don’t worry, you and I are still part of the original group. Nothing can change that. We’ll always remember that information because we hold all the versions of our lives within our minds even if we alter history. Even if we alter the future.”

“But what are the vials for?”

“The Tempus gene,” Thomas said as he took a step across the sidewalk and pulled open the door to the medical center. “We’re introducing it earlier, hoping the future looks different.”

I couldn’t move for several seconds even though so many people would have loved for me to vacate the middle of the sidewalk. This wasn’t a small little adventure for the fun of discovery and creating accurate records of our country’s history. This was big. Very big. And I couldn’t believe Thomas would allow me to take part in it.

Finally, Thomas reached out a hand and pulled me through the door. “I had a feeling you’d be impressed with this mission. But don’t forget the number one rule of time travel … always blend in with your surroundings.”

Thomas breezed past security guards and official-looking people like he owned the place. I saw several men and women squeezing themselves into what I knew from studying history in school was called an elevator. Thomas shook his head and opened another door, leading to a flight of stairs.

“Never trust technology in this year,” he said in a low whisper. “Those things are held by cables and a pulley system. Can you believe how they pack themselves inside, like there’s no risk?”

We went down three flights before reaching a door with a security code that Thomas had obviously been given. He used another code to enter a lab where a guy, probably a few years older than Thomas, stood wearing a white coat and safety goggles.

“Always taking the stairs, huh?” the guy said, not even looking up at us.

“I think President Healy would be a bit perturbed with me if I killed myself riding in an elevator when a perfectly good set of stairs was available,” Thomas said.

The guy turned his back completely on us and stuck his face in what looked like a microscope—a device I’d learned about in history class.

“Of course, President Healy. Wouldn’t want to do anything to disappoint him,” the guy said.

Even I could hear the edge in his voice. Thomas cleared his throat as if to alert him that they weren’t alone. “Grayson, this is our newest recruit, Blake.”

Grayson looked up at me suddenly, and his smile was warm and didn’t carry any of the edge he’d had just seconds ago. He stuck out a gloved hand to shake mine. “Nice to meet you, Blake. Thomas mentioned a newbie a while back, but I didn’t realize how young you were. You can’t be more than—”

“Fifteen,” Thomas finished. “Broke my record by two years.”

I stood up straighter, trying to grow instantly. “I’ll be sixteen in a month.”

Grayson smiled and it went all the way to his eyes like my mother’s smiles. I hadn’t seen an expression that honest since I left home. Impassiveness is something the government instills in all workers.

“How are you getting along so far?” Grayson asked me.

“Good … I mean … this is my first mission, but it’s been pretty exciting these last couple of months.” I got a good look at Grayson’s face now that he had turned toward me. His hair color was light brown like Thomas’s and his eyes were also blue like both Thomas’s and mine. The similarities were too great to ignore. It was like seeing what I might look like in ten years with Thomas and in twenty years with Grayson.

“But it must have been hard for you,” Grayson said. “Leaving home. I was nineteen and already on my own. Thomas was raised in the White House, he didn’t need any adjusting. But you’re just a boy.”

Thomas rested a hand on my shoulder again. “That’s why Dr. Ludwig is taking it slow with him. It’ll be a while before he’s doing his own missions.”

Grayson stared at me for a long moment, then his face formed the emotionless smile I had become used to in the last couple of months. “Well, let me show you what we’re doing here today.” He turned to Thomas, who dropped his hand from my shoulder and removed the vials from his pocket. “Thank you. Now, Blake, we have sixteen women who will undergo a procedure called in vitro fertilization in this hospital today. Basically, traditional methods of conception, in this year, anyway, haven’t been successful for them and they’ve sought the assistance of a fertility doctor.”

Grayson pointed to his chest, indicating that he was the fertility doctor these women sought out. He walked over to the center lab table and pointed to a small dish with clear liquid in it. “All of the women today have husbands who have donated specimens—sperm—to be joined with their wives’ eggs. You understand how this process works, correct?”

I gave a quick nod and felt my face heating up at the mention of conception, though this was a very technical scientific version that didn’t seem to involve contact between the two parents at all. But still, my mind couldn’t help but wander to thoughts of more traditional methods, and I hoped with all my power that these thoughts wouldn’t show up in the mission report.

“What we’re going to do today,” Grayson said, “is supplement the fathers’ specimens with that of a man carrying the Tempus gene in your present.”

“Do they know this?” I asked. “The parents? Won’t they know that there’s no genetic link between the real father and the child, at least after it’s born?”

Grayson nodded his approval. “Very good. You’re a smart one. All my patients sign a clause as part of our research program. The procedure cost is more affordable for a larger percentage of families, and in return, we get their permission to use a substitute specimen as needed to increase the probability of successful conception.”

“In other words,” Thomas added, “we tell the families that the father’s semen has a low sperm count, whether it does or not, and they consent to a donor because having a child is that important to them. Something I can’t even fathom, but it’s a very useful motivation for the purpose of our experiment.”

I was so blown away by the complexity of this project and the importance of our missions that I barely spoke for the rest of the trip. I watched Grayson carefully as he went through the steps to prepare each specimen for the procedure.

Later, when Thomas and I returned to our apartment, after being debriefed in the White House by Dr. Ludwig and his team, I finally asked him the question that had been on my mind since first being introduced to Grayson.

“So, is Grayson’s mission a long one? Like a few months? He seemed very comfortable in 1987.”

“He’s been on the same mission in the past for two years and hasn’t done a time jump since,” Thomas said. “Before that, he had a bad habit of using his time travel for personal reasons. He jumped too often and sustained an injury. His last jump for this current mission nearly killed him. The risk of bringing him back was too much. Dr. Ludwig decided that he needed to stay and be the field man for the Tempus gene experiment. He still has a chance to heal; it’s very possible he will in a year or two.”

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