“But you’re not him,” I replied, shaking my head.

“So then what makes a person dead?”

A stupid question.

“Dead is dead,” I shot back. “When the doctors say you’re dead.”

“When the heart stops?”

“No, when the brain goes dead, when the memories are lost, the essence of the person…”

“Most of your own memories are in the pssi, Bob, would they be gone if you suddenly were?”

“No…”

“So if a person’s memories aren’t gone, if some essence of them remains, are they truly dead?”

I paused.

“Remember having a bath together in the sink, mum sponging us off and singing in the dark when the first fusion core went offline, remember that?”

I smiled as tears rolled down my cheeks. “Yeah, I remember.”

“Remember throwing our toys over the deck into the ocean when nobody was watching, getting our proxxi to cover for us, and how angry mum was when we went and hid in one of the shark’s mouths when we went swimming for them?”

“That was your idea,” I laughed, nodding.

“We were quite the gang growing up,” he continued. “Us and our proxxi…Bob and Robert, William and Wallace, Sid and Vicious, Dean and Martin, Nancy and Cunard…”

“Yeah, that was quite the gang.”

“Have you talked to Nancy much lately?” asked Martin softly.

“No, I…” I replied. “No, not since, well, since you…”

“You should talk to her Bob.”

He looked at me steadily for a while.

“Hey, do you remember that night? We were sitting on the guard rails to the passenger cannon entrance. We must have been barely teenagers, and we were drinking beer. You had Robert override the security system and we had the whole place to ourselves. It was just you and me, sitting there.”

He paused for a moment before continuing, “We talked about what we would do together when we were old men. You told me how you were good at almost anything, all you had to do was apply yourself and you could do anything you wanted.  I think you were drunk—I think we were drunk.”

“We were,” I whispered between my tears.

“But I remember most of all, I remember thinking how great you were, thinking how I wasn’t that great, how I had so much trouble with everything and wondering why. But most of all I remember thinking how much I loved you, and how proud I was to just be your brother. You were the star of the pssi-kid program back then, even way ahead of Jimmy, I was so proud…”

“Yeah, I remember that night Martin,” I managed to choke out between sobs. I was crying full on now.

“I’m still here, Bob.”

Martin was looking directly into my eyes, his voice soft and full of love.

Have you ever made one of those three-dimensional line drawings of a cube on paper?  Two squares offset from each other with a straight line that joined each corresponding corner to make a three-dimensional looking cube?  If you stared at it, it seemed that one of the faces was closer to you, but if you concentrated and willed it, suddenly the cube flipped and the other face switched to being closer. As I looked hard at Martin right then, my mind performed a similar flip, and suddenly all I saw was my brother, sitting there in front of me in flesh and blood. A wave of love sprang from my scalp to my fingertips, and I got up to go and sit on the couch with him and hold his hand.

“Dean…Martin…I missed you so much, it’s just this place,” I said, shaking my head and squeezing his hand.

“I’ve missed you too,” replied Martin. “You’ve been so nasty to me these past few years. I always thought you hated me for some reason. It hurt so much, and I had no idea why you acted that way.”

Tears streamed down my face, and Martin reached up to wipe them away. Then he rubbed his hand across his own face. His demeanor changed and he sat bolt upright, taking a deep breath. He reached down to squeeze my hands tightly with both of his.

“Bob, stop with all the drugs, will you? And all these women… it’s not going to change anything. Calm down. Talk to Nancy.”

“You’re right,” was all I could think to say. “I’ll stop, I’ll try…”

“Good,” he said, brightening up. “And Bob, if you really believe all that stuff about gameworlds being real… then Dean is out there somewhere still, and I’m your connection to him.”

“This is all messed up.”

I was staring at the floor now. Nothing made any sense anymore. My whole life I’d felt like I was running away from something, fleeing before some unseen danger.

From now on it would stop. Maybe he was right, maybe I could still find Dean out there. I was right in the middle of one of the most amazing places on earth, where the impossible was becoming possible almost daily. I just needed to apply myself, get out of this daze I’d slid into.

“Bob,” asked Martin.

“Yeah?” I answered.

“Bob, why are you crying?”

Cripes. The blind spot had caught up . I wiped away my tears.

“Nothing, Martin, nothing. I’m just worried about the storms and Nicky dumping me and all that crap,” I lied.

His face brightened up.

“Don’t worry big brother, I’ll take care of you. Anyway, like I was saying, could you get dad to add me to the evacuation list. I don’t know what’s going on there, but I have a lot to do, so I’d appreciate it if you could help me.”

“No worries Martin, consider it done,” I replied with a sigh.

“Cool. Thanks.”

Martin got up off the couch and prepared to leave.

“Martin,” I said.

“Yeah?”

“Martin, I haven’t told you something lately.”

“Oh yeah? What’s that?”

I smiled, pausing, and the world clicked back into sense for me.

“Martin, I love you. I love you a lot, and I haven’t told you in a while.”

He looked away quickly, catching his breath.  Bringing up a hand to wipe the corner of one eye, he looked back and replied, “I love you too, Bob, that is so good to hear.”

“Okay good—now get!” I laughed.

He laughed back and shook his head as he disappeared.

This place, all of it, felt abruptly wrong. Like a switch being thrown, I suddenly knew something wasn’t right here anymore, and that this same something had swallowed Dean in its path. Blind spots—we all had them. So what was it that they were hiding from us, what was it we weren’t seeing?

I decided I was going to find out.

~ NEVERYWHERE ~

Book 5:

Nancy Killiam

&

William McIntyre

Вы читаете Complete Atopia Chronicles
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату