Parallel: The Secret Life of Jordan McKay (26 page)

I felt my nerves give up and I could no longer handle trying to understand any of this today. “I need to go lie down,” I said plainly.

He had a concerned look on his face as he offered me his hand. “Are you alright?”

I glared at him. “Yeah, sure. I just found out my whole life is a lie, and I’m carrying your baby that may or may not have the same traits you do. Things are great.”

He tilted his head as he grabbed my arm. “No, I mean are you okay. You look pale.”
I snorted. “Well I just threw up and my heart is racing, so of course I’d look pale.”
He picked me up against my will. “If you say so.”
I sighed. “I’d fight back but, I don’t feel like it.” It was almost painful to talk now, and I began to worry.
He laughed. “Maybe later, then.” We walked toward the stairs. “I really am sorry I never told you Kenzie.”
“Jordan.” I changed the subject fast. “Maybe I’m not okay.”
He looked at me with a sudden fear lacing his face. “What do you mean?”
“I…” I felt my head whirl as though he was twisting me in the air. “I don’t know, my stomach just...”

He stopped dead in his tracks and turned back down the stairs, out the door, and took me to the car. “I’m taking you to the hospital.”

I coughed then, but this time it was laced with blood and my body erupted into a cold sweat. “Jordan, what’s happening?”
He got in the car, mumbling something under his breath, and it was then that I noticed the blood on his shirt.
“Jordan, look!” I pointed as he looked at himself, and then at my jeans.

There was blood all over the passenger seat of the car now, and it was then that everything seemed to fade and I felt my body give. Though I tried to hold on I could no longer handle the rush of pain that was suddenly crippling me. In my heart, I knew the baby was already gone.

 

 

 

Story by Dr. Ashcroft,
Vincent Memorial Hospital, Boston
August 3, 2009
8:38 a.m.

 

I woke suddenly as a hand squeezed mine.

“Kenzie?” Jordan’s voice sounded weak.

“Jordan, is that you?” I looked toward the voice, finding his face. A sense of relief fell over me as it always did when I saw him, and it was then I realized I did not care what he said or did. I still needed him.

His face was tired and drawn. “Kenzie, I’m so sorry. This is my fault.”

“Is it gone?” It was the only thing I could think about, the only thing that mattered. My baby was gone. I knew it, though I desperately hoped he would tell me otherwise.

He nodded. “They believe so…” he trailed off.
“You saw, didn’t you?” I motioned for him to look at me, and as he did, I saw the truth.
“It was horrible, Kenzie. I never wanted to put you through all this.”

I didn’t like the tone of his voice. “Jordan, you can’t change this. This is how it was supposed to happen. Don’t you understand that?”

He nodded, but I didn’t trust it. He squeezed my hand again. “I want the best for you, for us.”

I took a deep breath as my stomach ached from the residual pain, “This is what is best for us, Jordan. A clean slate. Now we can start over with the truth, and re-build.”

He smiled, but I could see he felt lost, the look on his face like that of the man I saved from the bus. As hard as it was to believe all that he had told me, a part of me sensed the truth. I had been there all along the way, just as he had. I had pined for and loved the man of my dreams as much as he loved me here and now. I had no idea what had been happening to me, and I suppose if I had known all along, I would have tried to stop it, but here I am, with all I have.

“Do you want something to drink?” He rose from his stool. “I could use some coffee.”
I nodded. “Perhaps some water would be good.”
He leaned down and kissed me on my forehead.

I held onto his back as he pulled away, whispering in his ear. “Jordan, it’s alright. This is not your fault. You don’t need to change it.” I let go and he stood tall.

“I know, Kenzie.” He turned then and walked toward the door, pausing for a moment to smile before leaving.

I leaned my head back onto the pillow, thinking about what I’d lost. The baby was only two months old, no more than a tiny being. Perhaps the child saw what was destined for it when I found that book yesterday. Perhaps it knew by the way I had reacted that this life was not the one it wanted. I thought about the Kenzie in my dreams and the Kenzie I would have been. I had envied her freedom and her bravery, but perhaps that version of myself also envied me in a similar way.

Does it really matter if you change a moment in the end? For all the struggles I saw on her side of things, there were also the struggles here. In that other life I would have never been beautiful, while here that beauty haunted me. All I know is that it is what it is, and now it’s over. The best I can do is deal with the cards I have been dealt, and try to make the best of it.

I heard a crash in the hall as a woman screamed and I sat up in horror. I felt my blood curdle then as my mind began altering itself. Where the memories of our discussion about the journal in the office had once lived now lived the memories of the discussion never occurring at all. I put my hand over my mouth as my head began to ache, finding that Jordan was out there trying to change my memories and the past, though it seemed it still ended with the same horrible fate.

I pushed myself off the bed and sat up, wincing as I grabbed the I.V. drip and ripped it out of my palm, the needle leaving a deep bruise. I stood on weak legs as I heard doctors running down the halls, rushing past my room. I began to walk toward the door, afraid of what I would find, but determined to see. As I rounded the corner, no one noticed me but what I saw left me clinging to the wall for support.

Jordan was on the ground in a puddle of blood, his shirt soaked through the side. He was still conscious but I saw there was little life left; he was dying. All attention was on him now as a crowd of people bustled around him, and I lost a visual. Filled with fear, I pressed forward, moving people out of the way until the crowd parted and his eyes met mine. I saw then the despair and sorrow, and I understood why he did what he had. If there was any doubt left in me, it was now gone, replaced by the truth and the driving force behind his life.

He blinked as his eyelids became heavy, a doctor finally noticing my presence as he walked away from Jordan to me, taking my arm and leading me back into the room. I never saw Jordan again.

 

 

 

 

Statement from Dr. Ashcroft,

Vincent Memorial Hospital, Boston

August 4, 2009

06:08 a.m.

 

 

Dr. Ashcroft:

They tell me he’s stable, but non-responsive.

 

Agent Donnery:

This is true. They are trying all they can, but they need a kidney. He has type O blood, so it’s hard to find a donor.

 

Dr. Ashcroft:

You’re speaking to the gallery, Agent. I know this. There’s a 16% chance.

 

Agent Donnery:

Unfortunately you’re not a match either.

 

Dr. Ashcroft:

I also know that, Agent.

 

Agent Donnery:

And his family members are all deceased, which I know you also know, so…

 

Dr. Ashcroft:

No, I understand what you’re telling me. You’re trying to say that there is little chance to save him.

 

Agent Donnery:

We are trying hard. We want him to live for obvious reasons. Just wanted to make sure you are aware of the facts.

 

Dr. Ashcroft:

I appreciate it.

 

Agent Donnery:

Well, I better let you be. You probably need some sleep.

 

Dr. Ashcroft:

Yes, that would be good. Thank you.

 

Agent Donnery:

No, thank you. This will be a tremendous help.

 

Dr. Ashcroft:

One last thing, Agent. If he lives, what will happen to him?

 

Agent Donnery:

Nothing other than questioning. It’s not as though he can go anywhere anymore. You’ve made that clear. This other one though, we’ll need to find her. It’s not safe to allow them to run around changing things. One day it could change something huge, and we may not have a nation or world to answer to because of it.

 

Dr. Ashcroft:

(laughter) I understand. Tell your wife hello for me, and that I’m sorry I kept you.

 

Agent Donnery: I will.

 

 

 

 

August 4, 2009

6:23 a.m.

 

I watched Agent Donnery leave as I lay back against the pillow. I was exhausted but still awake. Reading the stories seemed to put everything into perspective, and I finally felt free for the first time in my life. I ran my hands across the book in front of me, wondering if Agent Donnery had meant to leave it or not. I pulled it to my chest and hugged it, thinking of Jordan and falling in love with him all over again.

I felt at peace, a feeling I hadn’t felt since I was very young, before all the dreaming. The light outside was just beginning to rise above the nearby hill as it hit the blinds, splaying a striped shadow across the hospital floor. I had worked in this hospital for a while now, and I knew they had given me the nicest room on purpose, something reserved for those with great healthcare.

I wondered then what they knew about Jordan, if anything at all, or if they simply thought it was a failed kidney. I thought back to the events of yesterday, my mind now harboring two memories in Jordan’s attempt to save his child. His efforts were proof in my belief that you can’t always change the future by changing the past. In the end I was still here, and no matter what, it was still another miscarriage.

I exhaled as I released my grip on the book and closed my eyes, allowing sleep to set in, too tired to push it away. There was a knock on the door then, and my eyes flickered open. I watched as light from the hall flooded the room and a shadow entered. It wasn’t until the door was shut that I saw it was a girl that stood there, dressed from head to toe in black. I felt my heart stop as a sharp breath caught in my throat, recognizing her from Jordan’s descriptions.

She stood like a shadow near the corner, her turquoise eyes just as I had imagined, but her skin was not the pale white that Jordan had suggested. I tilted my head, noticing it was now kissed with a bit of rose.

“I tried to tell him, but he wouldn’t listen.” Her voice was angelic as it filled the room, echoing the same way it had that day in Biology.

“You’re Molly.” I was still trying to process the fact that she was really here, like a fictional character come to life.

She nodded. “I am.”

I nodded back to her as she approached my bed. “I’m sorry I couldn’t stop him in time. Though I tried, he didn’t listen. He never listens.”

I laughed.

Molly smiled. “I’ll admit that I knew what he was going to do, so I met him out there in the hall…” she pointed over her shoulder.

“It’s dangerous for you here.” I watched her, her lashes long as they fluttered.

She tilted her head with a smirk. “No, not really. I know how to stay out of the way, if you know what I mean.”

I smiled, noticing that she still had not changed based on the stories. “You still seem young. Why? I thought you couldn’t Shift and remain the same age?”

She trailed her hand across the blankets on the bed, looking around as though taking in the feeling of this moment. “I’m the same age because I can be, because I Shift differently than Jordan.”

I nodded. “Jordan described you to have much fairer skin. Did you go on vacation?”

Her eyes darted to mine, the noticeable rose to her cheeks hard to deny. “Not really, I just became more alive.” She blinked and looked away.

“Ah.” There was little I could make of her replies, so I changed the subject. “Have you seen him?”
She smiled. “Yes. I’m actually here to take you to see him.”
I pressed my brows together. “Why help us? Why be there all along and yet let this happen?”

She watched me as I sat up, her lips parted as she breathed steadily. “Because it was meant to happen. It needed to happen.” She stopped and lowered her eyes. “Well…” I could tell she was struggling now. “Not all of it. My goal was to keep him from Shifting, but he’s so stubborn.” She shook her head and eyed the book in my grasp with strange recognition and belonging.

I placed it beside me and rolled off the bed, making sure to keep my gown shut at the back. Molly walked over to a nearby cabinet and found a change of clothes hanging inside.

“Here, wear this.” She shoved them toward me.
“What about you?” I looked her up and down. “They know what you look like.”
She shrugged. “No, they won’t see me, remember? I know where they are.”
I nodded. “Oh right, you’ve been there.”
She laughed. “You could say that.”

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