TIME & TIED: ESCALATION
ARC 2.3 - To the Past
PART 41a: RESCUE EFFORTS 1
The wind blew through the empty field, bending the long grass back. A few clouds floated by overhead as the sun approached its highest point in the sky. There was no one around for kilometers - miles, even.
Which is when, in the wink of an eye, three individuals appeared, along with a bunch of equipment. There was a brown haired boy with glasses, a tall blonde, and a redhead. Only the first of them was conscious. As such, only he was able to cry out in horror before all of them plummeted metres – feet, even – from the air down towards the ground.
***
Clarke pressed a hand to his forehead. "Corry, that language isn't going to improve the situation."
“Falling bloody well HURT,” the redhead fumed. "Damn it Dijora, you didn't say we'd arrive in free fall. Good thing I DIDN'T let my sister go on this trip, she's liable to have ended up with a broken leg for gods' sake!"
“Clarke’s right, calm down," Frank said, taking deep breaths to try and steady his own nerves.
They were all regaining their bearings in the middle of the empty field where they'd fallen. "Obviously there was a little spatial problem with altitude that we didn't account for," Frank reasoned. "But the long grass cushioned us, and I get the impression no one sustained any injures above some bad bruises."
“This from the guy who didn’t half land on a BIKE,” Corry fumed. He flexed his arm, then rubbed his shoulder. “Little altitude problem, my ass... I've half a mind to force you to take me back home right now.”
"You mean back home to Miami?" Clarke asked. “Since that is where you're living at this time, right?”
That remark finally shut Corry up, as he turned to regard the black box which had facilitated their arrival. Frank picked it up, turning it so that Corry could see the digital readout.
"A week before Julie's birth," Frank observed. “Alternatively, four days before she gets hit by an ambulance and dies. Let's hope it's enough time to track her down and prevent that."
"Son of a bitch," Corry muttered at last. "It really has happened, hasn't it. We've traveled through time."
Frank nodded. "We have."
Clarke turned away from the both of them, starting to sift through the rest of their supplies.
Corry rubbed his chin. “Damn. I'm not sure I truly believed it until now. Even after getting that letter."
"You thought you were lying to yourself?” Frank wondered.
"No, no," Corry said, shaking his head. “Bringing up my history with Julie convinced me I was serious. It’s more that, writing the letter out myself, right after receiving it? Sort of took the edge off. Made it feel like it could be a prank.” He tugged his earlobe. “Why couldn’t we simply bring the original back in time with us again?”
"Because until you wrote it out, there was no original," Frank reminded. “If the letter we have with us now had been the same one we received, it would have been created from nothing. And we couldn't risk adding that kind of paradox, not on top of all the other temporal problems we're dealing with at the moment.”
"Oh yeah, right," Corry said, irritation creeping back into his tone. "Just like Tim had to obtain fresh copies of the required documentation on his end. I don't know, it still sounds like a big waste of time to me." He sighed. “And what was that other note Luci gave to you?”
“I don’t know,” Frank admitted, glancing towards his backpack. “I’m supposed to give it to Julie.” He frowned, remembering that conversation.
This story has been stolen from Royal Road. If you read it on Amazon, please report it
***
“I don’t understand,” Frank protested. “What’s the point of this?”
“The point,” Luci said, tapping the envelope edge first on his chest, “is that without Laurie going along, you’ve become an all male team.”
“So?”
The asian girl shifted to tapping the envelope on his forehead. “Think, Frank. Julie might be a little intimidated by that.”
“Julie? She’s in charge of half our school, Luci. Nothing intimidates that girl.”
“WAS in charge,” Luci reminded. She reached out for his arm, using it to pull out his palm before slapping the sealed letter down into it. “Humour me. Call it a feeling. Give this message to Julie.”
***
“Oh well,” Corry said, scattering Frank’s thoughts. “On the bright side, I can't feel my writers' cramp any more - due to the pain in my shoulder!”
"You know, Corry," Clarke said, moving close to them once more. "Me and Frank are here to save someone’s life. Someone who is very important to me. If you're only tagging along because you didn't want your sister to be here, maybe you should wait in a hostel somewhere for the next few days. We can circle back to pick you up again before we go."
"Hmph," Corry grumbled. "Thanks, but no thanks. At this point, I'm not letting either of you out of my sight.” He raised his hands defensively off Clarke’s expression. “Look, I AM here to help, okay? After all, as much as I dislike Julie, I know things. Plus the thought of her being in this twisted little suicide plan you've described... I can’t let that go. No one should end up like that. No one.”
"So, Clarke, how did our supplies fare?" Frank asked of the taller boy, hoping to change the subject.
"We got lucky," Clarke replied, turning to him. “A dislodged chain and a couple bent spokes, nothing I can't fix. The compass is also fine, and between that and the maps we have, we should be able to find shelter in a nearby town before sundown.” Clarke shifted his gaze to the black box. “What about the time machine, Frank?"
"Good question," he realized, reaching out to grab the lever and pop the lid off. On the bright side, there was no smoke. On the down side... "Clarke, get me the small toolkit out of my pack," he requested worriedly, putting the machine down and crouching over it.
"Uh oh," Corry said as Clarke complied. “Another little 'calculation problem’?”
Frank didn't reply right away, instead spending the next several minutes carefully poking around the wiring. When he finally looked up, he suspected his face was pale. “I’m sorry. I should have known," Frank apologized. "I should have realized."
"Realized what?" Clarke prompted. "What do you mean?"
Frank took in a deep breath. "Remember how we figured on the time machine only being good for two, maybe three trips? Well, a sixteen year trip alters the recharge time, and puts more strain on the whole assembly which in turn..."
“Cut to the chase,” Corry interrupted. "What's the situation?"
Frank swallowed. “The time machine is broken again," Frank stated. "And I don't have the right materials to fix it here. So even assuming we rescue Julie... there is no way for us to return."
***
Luci sensed Laurie's presence behind her even before the redheaded girl sat down next to her in the school library. She chose not to acknowledge the arrival. Not even after Laurie had cleared her throat twice.
"Okay," Laurie said at last. "You want to be alone all lunch then.” She rose.
"Wait," Luci sighed, reaching out for Laurie’s arm and missing. She looked up from the empty spot on the table where she'd been staring for the last half hour. "Stay."
Laurie twisted her fingers together. "But if you're upset..."
"Better you talk to me than Chartreuse," Luci said, returning her attention to the tabletop. "I'm guessing she sent you over.”
"Chartreuse did figure the two of us had something in common right now, what with it being both my brother and my longtime crush on the trip with Frank,” Laurie admitted. She hesitated, then sat back down. “That’s what’s on your mind, right? Whether they’re okay?”
“What’s on my mind,” Luci began slowly, “Is that we’ve failed. Again. We doubled down on our bets, and we failed. AGAIN.” She reached up to grab her twin tails in her hands, yanking hard on her hair. “HOW? What did I miss? Why is this still happening? How do you normal people LIVE with the agony of knowing you can fail so SPECTACULARLY?”
“Whoa! C-Calm down, Luci,” Laurie pleaded, reaching out to touch her shoulder. “Sure, it’s Monday, but it was going to take the guys a few days to reach Julie in the past."
“Yes. In the PAST,” Luci reiterated. She turned to fully face the redhead. "Laurie, I hate to be the one to break this to you, but if they were coming back... they would be here already. They left Sunday night. They were going to return on the same day, so that Frank could call the police if he had to. Except now it's Monday! Over twelve hours later." Luci clenched a fist. "They're not coming back, Laurie, and it's all my fault. I never should have let them leave."
The redhead swallowed. “Maybe they set that machine wrong? They could come back tonight instead.”
"I don't think so," Luci countered. She pulled the creased paper out of her pocket, shoving it back at her companion.
Laurie unfolded the sheet. "It's that article Clarke talked about,” she realized. “Describing Julie's accident with the ambulance. So?”
"So don't you see?" Luci said. "If the others had been successful, we would know right away. That article would never have been WRITTEN sixteen years ago. No, something has gone wrong." She squeezed her eyes shut. "Something has gone very, very wrong, and for all my supposed intellect, I can’t figure out what. Let alone what to do about it.”