TIME & TIED: ESCALATION
ARC 2.4 - From the Future
PART 43a: DESPERATE TIMES 1
A figure stirred within the quiet, suburban home. Hazel eyes blinked open and a brunette teenager slowly picked herself up off the ground. She looked around, spotting a calendar hanging on the wall. Her mouth quirked up into an odd smile, and she tapped the barrel of her gun on her chin.
“It worked,” she murmured. "It worked, and now I'm... home." She began to laugh hysterically.
***
Fingers drummed nervously on the floor. Having decided a short time ago that her situation wasn’t actually funny at all - certainly nothing to laugh about - Julie had moved on to taking stock of her current situation. So, she had traveled back to the year of her birth. The time machine had worked, as described to her by Carrie that time in her former associate’s bedroom.
It was a stroke of luck that Julie had apparently ended up on November 9th. Almost as if the machine had already been set for that day, merely requiring Frank’s coin to provide the year. She looked down at the notes she had grabbed. Should she risk reprogramming the thing, to try and jump a little closer? No... she didn't have the right tools, or the confidence. Better to destroy the device instead. To prevent pursuit.
Julie proceeded to rip out what seemed to be the most important microchips, tossing them into the backyard. She put the notes into the garbage, and took the black box down into the basement, cramming it into one of the many half empty cardboard storage boxes she found. Her parents rarely decluttered, so there wasn’t much chance of it turning up - though even if it did, without the chips or the notes, it would be practically useless.
So, what was she supposed to do for the next three days? Devise a plan, of course. A plan to kill a baby. Julie felt her stomach lurch, but then again, she was already a murderer, right? She'd killed Carrie, and probably Frank too with her second shot. So what was one more death? Particularly when it would be her own. Merely one more death...
Something didn’t make sense. Her mind detoured.
Why had she shot Carrie? What exactly had brought her to Frank’s place that evening? Julie remembered being at the mansion. Then that man had called, asking to meet her at the park. The thirty-something guy had given her the gun, and told her what she had to do. It had made so much sense at the time! Up until the point of seeing Carrie bleeding on the floor...
'None of it will have happened once I cease to exist,' Julie rationalized, blocking the memory. One of SO many memories that she didn’t want any more. Okay, planning time. She had to figure out where the hospital was, that sort of thing. Pausing only long enough to find a bag to slip her gun into, Julie left the house.
***
Phil was here.
Barely an hour out of her house, and Julie found herself being confronted by impossible setbacks. She squeezed her eyes shut and counted to ten before peering back around the street corner.
Phil was still there.
If he was a hallucination, as he had been in the basement of her house, he’d become a more persistent one. Then again, this Phil could simply be a look-alike. Maybe an ancestor. Except why had Julie been left with the impression he was looking for someone?
Was he looking for her?
She felt her heart getting squeezed. Part of Julie wanted to run out to Phil and tell him everything, about what her parents had done to her, and about what she had done to Carrie. But another part of her urged caution. Could even Phil forgive her for what had happened? Worse, what if this was some kind of trap?
"Excuse me... you wouldn't happen to have any spare change, would you?" said a nearby voice.
Julie tensed. She turned. This homeless woman was about her height, with hair of approximately the same length and colour. The similarity ended there, but daylight was fading, so with the right clothes...
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"I'll give you twenty dollars if you do something for me," Julie answered. Almost as an afterthought, she moved closer to the woman and slipped the gun out from it’s concealment. "And if you don't do it right, I'll kill you too."
***
Jeeves re-entered the sitting room to find Luci pacing, Chartreuse fidgeting with some crystals, and Lee leaning over the couch where the fourth house "guest" remained tied up.
The LaMille butler was starting to regret having let them in. In doing so, he wagered that he had become an accessory to kidnapping, or harbouring a fugitive. He didn't know which. He didn't want to know. That way, he wouldn't have to deny anything later.
The one thing Jeeves DID know was that Julie was in some sort of trouble. Furthermore, ever since he had been hired three years ago to take care of this place, and thus indirectly to care for her, he’d felt a certain obligation towards the young girl. She was obviously very troubled, but she was also smart, strong, and more driven than any other teenager he knew. He couldn't understand why her parents didn't spend more time with her.
Indeed, it had been after leaving her alone with her parents for the one night that she had disappeared. Perhaps he shouldn't have reported Julie's actions at school to her mother and father. Or perhaps he shouldn't have agreed to take that night off. Yet they often released him that way shortly after coming home, and as a simple butler, had he really had any other choice?
Perhaps not. However, he did have a choice now. Namely whether to offer more information to these children, or whether to put a stop to things before they got out of hand.
"Pardon me," Jeeves stated archly. "But could one of you please enlighten me as to the current situation regarding Miss LaMille?"
Luci turned towards him. "Situation?" she said tiredly.
"You indicated to me earlier that by allowing you in here, it might ultimately clear her name," Jeeves reminded them.
"Oh. Yes." Jeeves noticed that the young girl’s eyes drifted over to the man on the couch, before she resumed her pacing. Perhaps this mystery man had been the actual culprit? "It's complicated,” she continued. “I’m sorry, but we need more time.”
“The thing is," Jeeves continued pointedly, "I just got off the phone with Miss LaMille's father.” That got all of their attention.
"I have been trying to reach her parents all afternoon,” he elaborated. “Ever since I learned that their daughter was being implicated in the recent shooting. I finally succeeded not ten minutes ago, only to be told by Mr. LaMille that he had no daughter. At first I thought that he was trying to disown her, however, it soon became apparent to me that he also had no recollection of even owning this house."
The butler watched as the three teenagers exchanged a glance. “He doesn’t remember Julie?" Chartreuse said, biting her lower lip. "Uh oh. Um, you don't think that means she, like, actually succeeded in... in the past, do you?"
Luci yanked a piece of paper from her pocket. "How could she have?” the young asian protested, scanning over it. She slapped at the page with her hand. "We know what happened back then. Look, girl hit by ambulance, three days before Julie was born. That hasn't changed.”
“Unless...” The man on the couch struggled to stand. “She is more powerful than I realized. We have to stop her, now!”
“Stop Julie?” Chartreuse said, confused. “No, that’s what, like, Frank and them are doing.”
"Whoa, okay, time out," Lee said, raising his hands in the traditional gesture. "I'm not sure I follow ANY of what's going on here, so back the bus up... if Julie's parents don't remember her now because of some change to the past - how come WE haven't forgotten her too?"
“The--“ Their captive cut himself off. “Your Carrie Waterson. I told you she had powers! Being in this town, right now, has put us in the eye of her time storm. We are not safe so long as she is around. Can you not see how time itself is beginning to destabilize? We must act fast. Someone help me up.”
Jeeves automatically felt himself take a step closer to assist, only to have the boy named Lee step between them. “Sorry, I’m thinking we keep Shady on the couch for now,” the teenager asserted.
“Yes!” Luci said, and when Jeeves turned to her, he saw that a light had come back into her eyes. She met his gaze. “Okay, Jeeves, thanks for the information but I bet none of this is making any sense to you, and we don't have time to explain. So, I know it’s a lot to ask, but unless you seriously object, can you leave us alone again? It’ll avoid you getting any more involved than you have to."
Jeeves raised an eyebrow as Luci voiced his earlier concern - yet he also sensed a hard edge to Luci's voice. Was helping Miss LaMille really worth potentially putting these other teenagers in jeopardy?
"I will allow you another few minutes to discuss the situation," Jeeves decided. "Should you need me, I will be in the hall." He turned and left the room once again, hoping that he was doing the right thing.
Then again, according to his employers, he didn’t seem to work here anyway.
***
After Jeeves had departed, Luci turned back to Shady. “You don’t KNOW,” she asserted, grinning.
“What don’t I know?”
“You don’t know what Carrie’s capable of,” she concluded. “Not really. Your description of her powers has been vague, you didn’t know if Frank’s admission would save her, and you sure as heck weren’t aware of whatever this ‘time storm’ was until Jeeves pointed it out. So how could you possibly know whether Carrie’s irredeemably insane or not?”
Luci drew in a deep breath. “The answer is, you don’t. Meaning we might still be able to save her.”
Shady shook his head. “Don’t be foolish. I know she’s dangerous.”
“Dangerous why?” Luci demanded. She moved in next to him, placing her hand on the couch next to his head. “Tell us, why exactly is Carrie Waterson dead in your future, Shady? Why did you have to come back to this time period to get her? Why, exactly, is SHE the one tied to time?”