'When our Trevor died, there was a civil war.'

Johnny knew that. 'Yes. From the power vacuum that ensued.'

'It wasn’t only about leadership. It was about this war. It was about whether or not it should still be fought at all. Some of us have grown weary of this crusade. We want it ended.'

'That does not sound possible, my dear. I’m afraid the invaders did not come seeking peace, they came only to bring destruction.'

She hesitated. His words obviously struck a cord.

'Reverend Johnny, I’m going to tell you something. You’re not going to believe it, so I’m going to show you. Then you’ll believe. Maybe it’s the only way you can save your friend. Maybe it’s the only way I can keep the same mistakes of cruelty and inhumanity from happening again. Maybe it’s…maybe it’s the only way I can help the Ashley of your world; and her son.'

She produced a handful of items from her jacket pocket.

'This is the ignition key to a small ground vehicle. You’ll find it parked around the corner. As far as any one is concerned it was requisitioned by the Second Logistics regiment. Take it. When you’re done, park it where you found it and lock the keys inside.'

'I can not fathom why I should need a car.'

She held up a combination security badge and key card. The photo was of another black man but with a beard, perhaps a slight resemblance to Johnny but by no means his doppelganger.

'This key opens a maintenance entrance on the south side of Building One Dash One in the industrial sector. It looks like a big cathedral. You’ll find a map inside the car that will get you there. I’m guessing you can be sneaky. Take a look around.'

'Please tell, Ms. Ashley. What am I looking for?'

Her eyes glazed and she spoke with a sense of doomed resolve.

'You are looking for the truth. The truth about the legacy of our Trevor Stone.'

– Trevor found the penthouse in good order and recently cleaned. Before rifling through his twin's belongings, he took a hot-warm-shower, finally scrubbing away the blood of his enemies. Away it went in a whirlpool down the drain.

After drying off and slipping into a robe, he let his curiosity guide him from room to room. However, he found almost no personal belongings. In fact, he did not find any signs of his old self until he found a box of photographs. The pictures showed him-that is, the other Trevor-posing with soldiers on the battlefield during better days.

The other Trevor was identical. Same hair, same build. Looking at the photos gave him the weirdest feeling. The feeling of seeing things he should remember, but did not.

As he dug deeper, he found other photos hidden at the bottom of the collection. They were pictures of Trevor and Nina.

Explicit pictures.

Had it not been his face on the body of the man in the pictures, Trevor would have felt himself a peeping Tom. Instead, he found himself intrigued by the lengths to which his other self and the Nina of this world had gone to…well…to get to the physical places they wanted to be.

With the penthouse so orderly and thoroughly cleaned, he found it hard to believe these photographs had been left behind by accident. He wondered if Nina wanted him to find them.

Regardless, he turned his attention to the closet, flipping through the clothes inside. Eventually he found slacks and a shirt that straddled the line between casual and formal.

He put them on, grabbed his recently requisitioned winter jacket, and rode the elevator to the main floor. As promised, a car waited at the curb, driven by an anonymous chauffeur who explained his instructions to take Trevor to 'a club' on the west side of the city.

A few minutes later, Trevor stood outside a short but wide building in what might have once been a commercial district. While the blackout remained in force, he spied a dim red neon and heard muffled music trying to escape through the front doors.

A guard eyed him suspiciously but did not intervene as he walked inside. He found something he had not seen since before Armageddon: a dance club, packed with people wearing civilian clothes similar to what he would have expected in similar clubs in the old days back on his Earth.

Ironically, the place felt like an alien environment to him. Flashing lights, beating music, short skirts, and colorful drinks…it all seemed out of place and, given the doom pervading the city, rather macabre. He would have felt more comfortable walking into a Devilbat den.

He paused inside the main entrance to allow his eyes and ears to adjust, and then moved forward, stopping first at a coat and weapons check before entering the main hall.

When they had been a new, young couple, he and Ashley visited the local clubs on occasion. Loud music, hard drinks, shouted conversations, and an over abundance of flirting. This one appeared no different, except for being on a parallel universe.

Along one wall stretched a vast bar showcasing a rack of liquor bottles and mixers. In front of the bar, stools occupied by the younger survivors of this world’s humanity.

Normally soldiers, technicians, and maintenance workers, they had traded in their battle suits and overalls for skirts and slacks, jewelry and high heels.

Tables lined the other walls and he saw some sort of booth, most likely home to the club's DJ.

Blue, green, yellow, and red strobe lights flashed across the dance floor where a few people moved to music that might have qualified as 'grunge' to Trevor's ear.

He looked around for Nina. She had to be-well there she was but it was only her pony tails that gave her away. She sat on a stool with her back to the bar holding a drink and wearing a white outfit highlighted by a very short skirt and black stockings. The Nina of this world did not leave much to the imagination.

She spoke with a green-eyed, brunette woman standing next to her wearing some kind of suede dress. They chattered, smiled, and laughed.

This other woman looked familiar, but he could not quite remember.

Nina’s hand touched the girl’s shoulder as they shared a thought, the brunette's hand casually-or deliberately? — brushed Nina’s crossed legs.

He watched.

Who was she?

The green-eyed brunette saw Trevor looking at them. Nina followed her friend’s gaze and when she saw him she smiled. A shark’s smile.

Nina said something to her companion, stood, and walked to Trevor while the green-eyed girl stayed behind and sipped from a frozen drink.

'Hey, glad you could make it,' Nina said as the music pumped and the lights flashed red and green over her face. 'His clothes fit you, I see,' she felt the shirt. 'Guess you two are alike in a lot of ways.'

Trevor found himself looking along the bar at the brunette.

'Oh, yeah, that’s Jolene. You remember Jolene, don’t you?'

Trevor vaguely remembered the girl from somewhere, from something that happened a long time ago. Something to do with his getting over to this world.

'She’s…she’s a friend. She wants to hang out with us tonight. She’s a lot of fun. What do you think? Do you think that would be okay?'

As she spoke, Nina maneuvered Trevor to an open bar stool. He sat down.

'Yeah, a, sure,' a voice said from his lips but it seemed a far away, distant voice.

'Oh good!'

She looked at the bartender and raised a finger then pointed that finger at Trevor. The bartender went to work on a mixed drink.

'That’s great,' Nina repeated. 'I was sure that’s what you would think. I knew you’d think that was a good idea.'

He projected a calm demeanor but underneath felt a tremor as images played through his mind.

'Well, here’s something else for you to think about,' Nina stepped in between his legs as he sat on the stool. She pressed against him. She put her mouth to his ear, almost kissing him.

'I want you to think about…' she spoke slowly, deliberately.'I want you to think about two pair of lips…all over

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