Parallel: The Secret Life of Jordan McKay (22 page)

Dr. Ashcroft:

I honestly don’t know. After reading all this, you’d think she would have tried, especially when she wanted to save him and their kind. Why invest the time, then let him die?

 

Agent Donnery:

And you haven’t seen her at all?

 

Dr. Ashcroft:

(pause) No.

 

 

Agent Donnery:

Tell me then, what happened next?

Dr. Ashcroft:

We got married in the summer, too anxious to wait much longer. It was a beautiful day; rainy, but still beautiful. After that, we settled into a routine. He never did go get a job, though. He never wanted one. I always felt he was waiting for the right thing to come along, something that fulfilled him in a manner that would bring joy to his life, much like my work as a doctor did. Besides, since the race, we really didn’t need to work. I just continued because I loved it, and he respected that. For me, it was fun.

 

Agent Donnery:

So he sat at home all day?

 

Dr. Ashcroft:

(laughter) Hardly. He was always doing something. Always tinkering with his bikes or going to the nearby park. He liked to run and play tennis as well.

 

Agent Donnery:

What about the bruise on his stomach. What did you think?

 

 

Dr. Ashcroft:

Honestly? I just figured he had a residual scar, tissue that had been so damaged that it remained grey and dark. It’s not unheard of. He told me that it was from that night at the Rugby House. So, I never thought otherwise. If I had known he had literally micro-waved his organs to the point that they were holding on by a thread, I certainly would have never let him drink as he did.

 

Agent Donnery:

Certainly that did little to help the healing.

 

Dr. Ashcroft:

No, it didn’t, but it’s not like he drank much, not when his father had the alcoholic gene. He typically only had one drink a day, unless it was a bad day.

 

Agent Donnery:

What were his bad days like?

 

Dr. Ashcroft:

Just depressing. He would recede into the study and sit for hours. About once a year it happened, right around the anniversary of his mother’s death, which I understood.

 

 

Agent Donnery:

Did your parents love him?

 

Dr. Ashcroft:

Like their son. They still do. I haven’t told them about Jordan’s secrets yet because I figure it would scare them. Besides, they have enough to worry about right now, considering the circumstances.

 

Agent Donnery:

So what next? What happened?

 

Dr. Ashcroft:

He got restless.

 

 

 

Stories from the journals

of Patient #32185

December 15, 2008

02:38 p.m.

 

 

“There you are. Have you seen how much snow here is outside?” I took a few steps into the room and halted.
He looked up from the book he was reading. “Oh yeah, look at that.”
I sighed, sensing he was in another mood. “Are you doing alright?”
He looked at me, his face drawn. “Yeah, sure.”

He always tried to hide it from me, but I knew. “No you’re not. What’s going on?” I sat in the leather chair beside his as he closed his book and placed it on his lap.

“Do you still dream like you did in college?” He breathed slowly.

I shrugged, wondering where the question came from. “Sure, from time to time, but a lot less now than before, and I no longer have dreams about events that could have happened, the déjà vu stuff. It’s all repeats now, and that’s all.”

He nodded. “Well, that’s good.” He ran a hand through his hair. “Do you ever wish you could still see those things, though? I mean, do you miss that other life of yours?”

I looked back at the book he was reading, noting it was The Time Machine by H.G. Wells. “Is that why?” I pointed to the book. “I doubt my dreams had to do with time travel.”

He shook his head. “No, that’s not it.” He flipped the book over and stashed it away. “I was just wondering if you missed your dreams, that other life you told me about.”

I tilted my head and looked toward the stacks of books on the wall. “Sure, at times, but I also enjoy getting a good night’s sleep.” I leaned forward in my chair and put one hand on his knee. “That life was never real. I figure it was my mind’s way of coping with the popular life I was subjected to growing up, and once all that ended in college, so did the dreaming.”

He looked at me. “You didn’t like your childhood?”

I shrugged. “It’s not that I didn’t like it, it’s just that it was a burden at times. But it was a burden for the Kenzie in my dreams as well. She had other issues to face that caused equal pain. She just seemed freer, that’s all.”

He let out a long, sorrowful breath, and picked up The Time Machine once more. “I was just thinking about how he tried to save his fiancé so many times, but no matter what, she still ended up dead. She was meant to die.”

“Well, sure. You can’t change fate, Jordan. It is what it is, one way or another. Like I said, the person in my dreams suffered in a different way. She suffered for her looks, her bad luck, and her failed career. I suffered for my looks in the same way, but opposite, and though I love my career, it has its pressures and a certain honor that I have to uphold.” I leaned back in the leather as it creaked in protest. “Jordan, life is what it is, people die and people suffer.”

He nodded. “It’s true, there was never anything I could do to try and save my mother. No matter what, she was meant to die.”

This week was the anniversary of her death, and I feared this week more than any other every year. Losing her had taken something out of him, something I could never understand. “I know you may wish that you could go and change things, Jordan, but it won’t. Saving her won’t make things better. I need you here with me now, and she wants that for you as well.”

His jaw tightened.
I looked away from him, figuring I’d said enough.
“No, it’s just, I…” he paused and sat forward. “I’ve lived a unique life, Kenzie.”
“Of course you have, Jordan. I know…”

He cut me off. “But you don’t know, Kenzie, and it kills me. You don’t know how beautiful you were as a child, how amazing and innocent, you don’t know how cared for you were.”

I nodded with wide eyes. “But I do, Jordan. I know I had a wonderful family, and I know that it kills you that God did not grant you the same, but you cannot blame me for that. You cannot compare our lives in the hopes of finding answers.”

He leaned forward and grabbed my hand. “Kenzie, I know that. That’s not what I’m trying to say. I chose my childhood. I know the life I lived, and I wouldn’t change it, not anymore.”

I frowned. “Jordan, I’m trying to understand, but I can’t…”
“Kenzie, do you remember the day when your family moved into the house they live in now?” His eyes were intense.
“A little, sure, why?” I was confused.
“Do you remember going to the park that day?”
His words shocked me as they jogged my memory. “Yeah, sure I do, but how do you know that?”
“I was there, Kenzie. I was the boy in the park.” He shook my hand, his eyes full of a storm I had all but forgotten.

“That was you? You were the boy? But…” The thought began to gain strength in my head. “But where did you go? How did you know that was me?” My eyes searched his but the storm had faded, and the window to his soul had closed.

He sighed and sat back. “I lived down your lane, but I moved out soon after.”

I pursed my lips, trying to remember which house and which memory was real. “The green house down the lane? The abandoned one where the sad old man had lived?”

“Was he sad?” His eyes seemed to gloss over.

I shrugged. “Yeah, sure. At first he seemed angry, but after a while he grew sad and lonely. Stopped working, stopped caring for anything, really. He didn’t live long, though.” And that’s when it hit me. “He was your father, wasn’t he?” A rush of shock sent a cooling wave across my body, and I shivered, seeing the old man’s face.

He nodded. “Yes, he was.”

I had nothing to say then as sadness fell over me, the room now filling with thick emotion. The eyes of the old man should have given it away, but how was I to remember such a seemingly infinitesimal moment with such clarity? My friends would tease and taunt the old man, but I remember I’d always felt grief for him, as though we were connected. Now to find that we had been connected by the future.

“I still own that house, you know.” I saw a tear fall from his eye as I looked at him.

I could understand why he never told me about his family, so I wasn’t angry, just surprised that they had been so close to my own life. Exhaling, I tried to wrap my head around the thought of owning a house, and not just any house, but that house. “We do?”

He nodded. “Yes.”
I waited a moment before saying anything more. “Do you ever go back there?”
He continued to nod. “All the time.”

I thought for a moment about the fate of it all, and how he’d saved me so many times since. Was that a coincidence? Were we really so star crossed that all our past had been fate? I thought about the man in my dreams as he again resurfaced on the walls of my mind, looking more like Jordan than ever before, though that was still absurd. It was a dream, that was not possible, a dream where a human could change the past and future, or at least try to. I shook it off, figuring that I was manifesting the thought because of my love for Jordan and the fairy tale it created in my mind. Life wasn’t like that.

Jordan was watching me now with a close eye. “What are you thinking about?”
I quickly came up with something viable. “Just the house.”
He leaned back and clutched the book to his chest.

I cursed myself and bit my tongue, my mind screaming to ask but my sanity telling me to hold back, that the day would come when I could explain my thoughts to him. Perhaps he didn’t know, perhaps there really were these parallel lives, and his and mine were truly intertwined, and the man in my dreams was the puppeteer for us both. A smile grew across my face, like a mad man dreaming. Perhaps what he wouldn’t say was the fact he had dreamt too. But why wouldn’t he tell me when he knew so much about my dreaming? Of all the people out there, I understood.

“Are you sure you’re alright, Kenzie?” He lifted one brow.

“Oh, yes fine. Just thinking about the house as a kid, that’s all.” I stood then and left the room like a stunned bird, leaving him in his solitude.

“Kenzie, wait.” I heard him stand.

I turned on my heel very slowly, finding he was right behind me. He placed one hand on my cheek.

“I’m sorry for being such a downer.” He traced his fingers behind my ear and down my neck. I felt goose bumps cover my body. The man in my dreams was screaming at me now, angry that I didn’t recognize him, angry that I couldn’t figure this puzzle out.

“That’s alright,” I replied. His grey-blue eyes searched mine as he leaned in and kissed my neck, then my collar bone.

Time stopped as his nose grazed back toward my face and across my cheek. I was still shaken, but I felt the fear slowly fade as the heat returned to my body. I looked up at his face and put my arms around his chest. His smirk was irresistible and I leaned in for a kiss, but he leaned back with a grin instead.

“Will you forgive me?” His eyes glimmered.

I laughed. “I think that’s what I was doing.”

His hand traced up my spine and he pulled me toward him, our lips intertwining for a moment as I closed my eyes, thinking of my dream man and making it him; a sense of guilt washing over me as I did so.

When he leaned back, a smile lit across my face as he plucked me off the ground and I began to laugh. “Jordan! What are you doing?”

His smile stretched from ear to ear. “Having a little fun, my love.”

 

 

 

Statement from Dr. Ashcroft,

Vincent Memorial Hospital, Boston

August 4, 2009

05:12 a.m.

 

Agent Donnery:

This is painful. It seems you both wanted to come clean about it, but couldn’t.

 

Dr. Ashcroft:

Well, of course. I guess we both feared we’d think the other was crazy. If anything, though, we both would have understood and things would have been easier. I laugh now because it really was the same man, and my guilt was not needed.

 

Agent Donnery:

Not at all. Perhaps you should trust your judgment. Just think, if you both had simply confessed, then Jordan would have had the companionship he had found with Molly, and that understanding of who he was.

 

Dr. Ashcroft:

Yes, exactly. And I would have had my explanations so that I no longer felt I was burying this part of me that had really lived. (pause) But not just that. We would have been able to avoid all this, too.

 

Agent Donnery:

How did it feel living in that house?

 

Dr. Ashcroft:

I remember the day we first went back there. I was so terrified because as a child, my friends and I always teased that the house was haunted, and here I was waltzing in the front door.

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