“I can’t do it,” I mumbled again, resting my head against the side of the box. “It’s too much.”
“But you hardly even
tried
,” Tori said. “We’d only just started, and you . . .” She threw up her hands and stalked a few paces before whirling back to me. “You’re fine now, aren’t you? So take a break and get your strength back, and then try again.”
“Tori,” said Faraday.
She pushed her hands impatiently through her tangled hair. “You want me to say please? To beg? I’ll do all of that. But don’t ask me to apologize. You think I don’t know what’s going to happen to me—and to her—if Mathis and those other scientists get hold of us?” She crouched down and gripped my wrist. “Please, Alison. I’m begging you. Don’t give up.”
Anger sparked inside me, white-hot and blinding. I wrenched my arm away. “I will go crazy!” I shouted at her. “My mind will snap, and I’ll fall apart, and never be the same person again! Is that what you want? You think I wouldn’t rather stay here and risk the chance of dying, than spend the rest of my life locked up in a place like Pine Hills—or worse?”
Tori’s face turned white. She leaped to her feet and walked out, leaving Faraday and me alone.
I slumped, exhausted by the force of my own emotion. “I’m sorry,” I said to Faraday.
He drew his fingers lightly down my cheek, his expression tender. “Every time you show your feelings, you apologize. Have you ever had an emotion in your life that you weren’t ashamed of?”
I couldn’t answer. All I could do was blink at him, as his features blurred and my lashes clumped together with tears.
“I’ve seen your medical records,” he said. “Migraines. Stomach cramps. You’ve held back so much, Alison, for so long, that you’re making yourself sick. What would happen if you stopped fighting, and gave yourself permission to feel? Not just the good things, but everything?”
“I’d lose my mind,” I whispered.
“I don’t think so. Do you know something about antipsychotic drugs, Alison? If you aren’t psychotic when you start taking them, you soon will be. Hearing voices, hallucinating, experiencing all kinds of delusions and paranoid thoughts. When I first came to Pine Hills to meet you, that was the state I expected to find you in. But instead, I discovered a young woman who was confused and hurting, but also fully aware of who she was, where she was, and what was and wasn’t real. After all you’d been through, you had every reason to be insane—but you weren’t.” His voice lowered. “You’re not.”
He’d never stopped believing in me, even when the evidence against my sanity seemed overwhelming. I only wished I had half as much faith in myself as he did. I leaned my cheek against his palm, and closed my eyes.
“All I ask,” Faraday went on, his thumb stroking my face, “is that you try one more time. I will shut the wormhole down, I promise you, the instant you tell me it’s too much. But you’re stronger than you give yourself credit for, Alison.”
I wasn’t sure about that. But I knew that if I gave up now, I’d regret it for the rest of my life. I sat back, rubbing my eyes until patterns exploded behind the lids. “All right,” I said. “I’ll try again.”
. . .
I whirled through a sandstorm of cosmic dust, floundered in a sucking bog of dark matter. Neutrinos riddled my body, and the beams of a trillion stars lasered through my skin. I opened my mouth to scream, but nothing came out—
“Alison.” Faraday’s voice washed over me, soothing as aloe. “Talk to me. Tell me what you’re seeing.”
I wasn’t seeing anything, because my eyes were squeezed shut. I was lying face-first on the pavement outside Champlain Secondary, my hands sticky with Tori’s blood. I was strapped to a bed in an isolation room, writhing and sobbing. I was huddled in my lonely cell in Red Ward, staring into space.
“I need you to look, Alison. I need you to tell me if you sense anything on the other side of that wormhole that’s familiar. Anything that feels like home.”
I was struggling to get away as Kirk’s hands wandered over my body. I was listening to my mother weep as she told me my grandmother had been mentally ill. I was sitting in Dr. Minta’s office while he told me the man I had known as Dr. Sebastian Faraday was nothing more than a dream.
“She can’t do it.” That was Tori, a flat line of despair. “Just forget it. Let her out.”
“Is that what you want, Alison?”
“Wait,” I said.
And then I opened my eyes, and looked straight into the wormhole.
It was black, but it wasn’t empty. It was full of wonders visible and invisible, a teeming pool of energy and cold heat. I tasted icy comets shooting through the void, cringed away from the blaze of a supernova—
“No,” I gasped, surfacing. “It’s not home.”
“Well done.” Faraday’s words stroked my aching back, as the wormhole’s dark iris snapped shut and disappeared. “How do you feel?”
I relaxed into my bed of foam. “Better. Now.”
“Take a couple of minutes,” said Faraday. “And then, if you’re ready, we’ll try again.”
. . .
By the time we’d opened and closed six more wormholes, I was exhausted. The effort of holding myself together was so enormous that I felt ready to shatter.
“There has to be another way,” I panted to Faraday.
“If I could give you one, I would.” He spoke levelly, but even through the walls of the box I could smell his worry, his guilt. “Tell me to stop, Alison. That’s all you have to do.”
“You are doing
amazing
, Ali,” Tori told me, her voice clogged with tears. “I know you can do this. Just—hang on a little longer. Please.”
I didn’t answer. I just lay there, staring at the inside of the helmet, as the beam streaked purple across the blackness and tore open the rift again.
This time I didn’t even brace myself. I was too weak for that. I was a dry reed, a spent candle, insubstantial as a breath. My life was meaningless, my thoughts futile. If the universe wanted to erase me, in all its eternal and infinite might, who was I to resist?
In my mind’s eye I saw Faraday leaning heavily on the console, his eyes shut in anguish and his unruly hair tumbling over his forehead. I saw Tori slumped against the side of my crate, one arm slung across the lid as though she could hug me through its metal surface, and give me comfort. And I saw Mathis, disheveled and furious, smashing a chair into the door of his room again and again until it buckled, and began to give way—
Sensations poured over me, into me, filling me up and spilling over. I could feel my shell of sanity cracking, my worst fears and darkest memories trying to break through, but I had no energy left to try and hold myself together. My only thought now was for Tori and Faraday—and what would happen to them if I failed.
So instead of fighting, I surrendered. I abandoned all dignity, every pretense of shame or self-control, and threw myself wide open to it all.
The emotions poured out of me, a torrent of sobs and tears and rage, a babble of all the words I’d never spoken, all the thoughts I’d never dared voice. I loved my mother, even though her fears had haunted my childhood and left me afraid to get close to anyone. I hated my father for teaching me to avoid confrontation, and to hide from the truth instead of facing it. I missed Mel, the closest friend and worst betrayer I’d ever had. I envied Tori her popularity and her self-confidence and her loving family, even though it wasn’t her fault she had all those things and I didn’t. And I was terrified of losing Faraday, a soulmate so perfectly made for me that even now I was half afraid I’d invented him.
As the past few weeks of my life raced through my memory, I saw with painful clarity how ignorant I’d been, how many foolish mistakes I’d made. I’d resented Dr. Minta for misdiagnosing my problems and forcing medication on me against my will. I’d pitied Sanjay for living in a fantasy world, and I’d avoided Micheline because her angry cynicism and lapses into self-injury made her the last kind of person I wanted to be. But the truth was that I had no right to judge any of them, not even Kirk. Because even if I hadn’t inherited my grandmother’s schizophrenia, I was still full of ignorance and delusion and buried rage, and I needed help.
I had no idea if I was only saying these things in my mind, or right out loud for Faraday and Tori to hear. But it didn’t matter, because I’d finally reached the end of myself, all my self-reliance and denial and pride unraveling into nothingness, leaving only a blank Alison-shaped space behind. It was finished. I was done.
But just as I felt myself dissolving on the tide of my own self-condemnation, the dark waves receded, and I floated into a celestial calm.
I saw the whole universe laid out before me, a vast shining machine of indescribable beauty and complexity. Its design was too intricate for me to understand, and I knew I could never begin to grasp more than the smallest idea of its purpose. But I sensed that every part of it, from quark to quasar, was unique and—in some mysterious way—significant.
I heard the universe as an oratorio sung by a master choir of stars, accompanied by the orchestra of the planets and the percussion of satellites and moons. The aria they performed was a song to break the heart, full of tragic dissonance and deferred hope, and yet somewhere beneath it all was a piercing refrain of
glory, glory, glory
. And I sensed that not only the grand movements of the cosmos, but everything that had happened in my life, was a part of that song. Even the hurts that seemed most senseless, the mistakes I would have done anything to erase—nothing could make those things good, but good could still come out of them all the same, and in the end the oratorio would be no less beautiful for it.
I realized then that even though I was a tiny speck in an infinite cosmos, a blip on the timeline of eternity, I was not without purpose. And as long as I had a part in the music of the spheres, even if it was only a single grace note, I was not worthless. Nor was I alone.
God help me
, I prayed as I gathered up my raw and weary senses, flung them into the wormhole—
And at last, found what I’d been looking for.
There was no way I should have been able to recognize Earth from such a distance, when it was nothing but a bluish-white dot among the stars. But I heard the cosmic orchestra change its tune, caught the barely perceptible buzz of the signal I would always think of as Tori’s Noise, and I knew.
“That’s it!” I yelled.
Faraday bolted upright and slapped his hand down on the console. Another pulse of light streaked past me into the wormhole, frilling its edges with a thousand un-nameable hues, as the signal from the two relays connected. Tearing off my helmet, I flung myself out of the box into Faraday’s arms, and Tori grabbed both of us simultaneously in an exuberant group hug.
“You have to stop him,” I panted at them both. “Mathis— he’s almost got the door open—he’ll be here any minute—”
“There’s no time for that,” said Faraday. “The wormhole won’t stay stable for much longer. It’s already in a state of temporal flux, and it’s only going to get worse. You and Tori have to go.”
Tori’s face sobered. She pulled the relay out of her tool kit and set it down carefully on the floor, then backed up a step, shaking out her hands and arms as though warming up for a marathon. “Okay,” she breathed. “This is going to hurt, but it’s going to get us home. I can do this.”
Faraday moved toward the console again, but I caught his hand. “Don’t stay here. Come with us.”
“I can’t.” His voice was square with resolve. “The impulse generator we rigged up isn’t stable enough. Someone has to stay on this end and keep the readings constant, to make sure you get through safely.”
I began to protest, but he stopped my lips with a finger. “You’re still young, Alison. Too young, for all that I allowed myself to forget that for a while. You need time to decide who you are and where you want to be, and I’d only get in your way.”
Hot tears welled up in my eyes. I wanted to deny it, to tell him we could work things out, but there was no point. When he’d told me I was too young, he’d meant it.
“But . . . what’s going to happen to you?” I asked. “When Mathis finds out what you’ve done—”
“Don’t worry about that. I’ll be all right.” He took my face in his hands and brushed his lips against mine in a final, achingly brief kiss. “Good-bye, Alison.”
Then he let go of my hand and stepped back. Away from me. Forever.
Tori stood by the relay, waiting. With leaden feet, I walked to stand beside her as Faraday reached toward the console, ready to send us both home. Grief surged inside me, filling my mouth with the bitterness of unsaid words, and I almost swallowed before I remembered that I didn’t want to do that anymore.
“I love you,” I blurted at Faraday.
His violet eyes met mine, deep and serene as ever. “I don’t love you.”
“Liar,” I said with a tear-stained laugh, and then his hand came down and the world splintered into a trillion pieces as the relay tore us apart.