Read Remember the Future Online

Authors: Bryant Delafosse

Remember the Future (12 page)

11

Both arms stretched out, Sadie fixed all her attention on Maddy, studying her face in silence with hands held open in a gesture reminiscent of surrender.

After a few moments of hesitation, Maddy took the other’s hands.

“I don't want to know specifics, dear,” Sadie told her.  “I just want to know why I'm feeling that you have saddled this blessin’, this gift, with enormous guilt.”

“Who am I kidding? I lived fast,” Maddy confided.  “Now I'm dying young. I know the drill.”

“Your gift was given to you as a test to preserve your soul and you failed miserably.”

Maddy watched Sadie with slowly reddening eyes.

Sadie chuckled benignly and squeezed Maddy's hand.  “I believe that this is the lie you’ve been tellin’ yourself--that what you’re dealin’ with is a punishment for past sins.”

“Listen, I'm no saint. I'm a human being. I made mistakes.”

“That's the first revelation I had on my own journey,” Sadie admitted. “I see that you've come to it sooner than I did.”

“Do you know what I see?”

“You remember what has yet to happen,” Sadie stated without hesitation.  “I’ve seen that sort of thing only once before.  She had the same blur around the edges of her aura that you do.  Like the future ain’t never fixed solid.”

Maddy leaned closer, eyes widening.  “You’ve seen this before?”

Sadie nodded and gave her a warm smile.  “Did you think you were the only one to suffer what you got, sugah?  You look to be in a lot better shape than most of the head-cases that pass through here.”

“What else do you see?”

“That you’ve got a rare soul.  An honest one.  And that there is great risk to you, my dear. Le Mal. It pursues you.”

Maddy clutched Sadie’s hands tighter.  “They’ve been after me since…”

Sadie shut her eyes and held her hands up to Maddy.  “No specifics. This battle you've already forfeit in your heart. It's stronger than me, you tell yourself. Resistance seems pointless.”

Maddy stared at Sadie in wonder, a gracious smile blooming on her face. She nodded.

“The rock isn't expected to stop the wave, y’see. Truth comes to face that which is evil, not overcome it,” Sadie said.

“That's what Grant's been trying to do all along,” Maddy replied.  “Grant is the man I’m with.  I wouldn’t have survived the last twenty-four hours without him.”

Sadie sighed heavily and took Maddy's hands once again.  “I’ve got to tell you.  This man you're travelin’ with--death has taken his soul a long time ago and he's been courtin’ it like a jilted lover ever since.”

Maddy stared soberly at Sadie.  The smile that was on her face slowly dissolved.  She shook her head in confusion.

“Sugah, that man just ready to die.”

12

“I can tell a lot about a person by the sound of their voice,” Horace told Grant as he sipped from his can of simple red-label beer.  “In your case, I hear the voice of a man whose tank’s done been drained clean.”

“It’s been a long day, sir,” Grant replied with a sigh, contemplating the can of beer on his knee as he sat back in a wicker chair beside Horace.  His eyes continued to scan the street beyond the cluttered yard.  “I’ve lost a bit of the spring in my step.  That’s all you’re hearing.”

Horace grunted agreeably.  “Yeah, but that ain’t it,” he answered.  “How old you think I am, Grant?”

Grant gave him a long look.  “I don’t know.  Mid to late sixties.”

“I am eighty-two years old.”

Grant gave him a second look, nodding appreciatively and raising his can to him in a toast.  “I must say, you’re in great shape, sir.”

Eerily, Horace raised his own can in response.  “Yeah, I ain’t no spring chicken but do you hear any despair in my voice?”

Grant took a long drink and shook his head.  “No sir, I don’t.”

Horace finished his own then wiped his mouth with his sleeve.  “Sonny, I hear it in yours.”  He crumpled the aluminum can and tossed it blindly into a half-filled recycling can a few yards away with amazing accuracy.

Grant lowered his head, sighing heavily.

“What?” Horace coaxed him gently.

“Lately, I’ve been questioning the order of the universe,” Grant said, taking a sip of beer.  “How is it the worst of us drive the best cars and wear the best suits?”

“That is indeed a question for the ages.”

“What kind of world do we live in where evil men are rewarded and hard-working men live in poverty?”

“The world is a hard place for the man with an eye toward elevatin’ himself above his station in an honorable way,” Horace replied, with a solemn nod.  “Sometimes it might seem like a desert to a man dyin’ of thirst.”

Grant studied his can and drained the rest.  “That’s exactly right,” he said, tossing his can to the recycling can and missing entirely.  “Hell,” he muttered, rising to retrieve it.

Instead, Horace drove his heel down atop it, dragged the can over to the edge of his seat, reached down and retrieved it himself.  He tossed it effortlessly into the can with a flourish.  “You got to rise above your station.  Use whatever you’ve been given and stop wishin’ things were any damn different.  Because they ain’t.”

Grant stared at the black man thoughtfully.

“You know how much harder my life would’ve been if I ever once thought I was a victim, Grant?”

Grant lowered his head and shuffled back to his seat.

“You ever think instead of dyin’, the Man upstairs might have other plans for you,” Horace asked.  “Why do you think he put this little girl into your life?  You think it’s pure chance?”

“Maybe she’d be better off without me.”

“Why don’t you let her make up her own mind on that one,” Horace snapped.  “Go get us two more.”

“Thanks, but I think I better go find Maddy,” Grant said, rising slowly.  “We’re kinda on a tight schedule.”

Horace gave a nod and settled back with a smile.  “Was that your stomach I just heard or did you bring an angry dog in with you?”

Already halfway across the porch, Grant shook his head in disbelief.  “Amazing, Horace.”

“You can have what’s left of that chicken in the fridge if you and ya girl want it.”

13

Feeling suddenly anxious as if a confrontation were imminent, Grant headed into the backyard, carrying a folded paper towel with a large breast and thigh of fried chicken inside.  He found Sadie in the same booth seat, fanning herself and reading a romance paperback.

Removing the remnants of the picked-clean chicken leg from his mouth, Grant urgently asked Sadie, “Where's Maddy?”

“She's restin’,” she responded, turning her book face down on the table. “Why don’t you have a seat?”

Grant cast a look over his shoulder toward the trailer.  “I just had a long talk with Horace.  You seem like really nice people, but I told him the same thing I’m telling you now.  Maddy and I have a situation that requires us to keep moving.  The longer we stay in one place, the hotter the fire.  You understand?”

Sadie simply stared at him.

Grant shifted nervously from one foot to the other, casting another look over his shoulder.

“Out of the two of you, she seems to be the more perceptive and she’s takin’ this opportunity to sleep.”  Her eyes moved down to the chicken leg in his hand.  “And I see that you felt you could spare a few minutes to eat.”

Tucking the chicken leg into the paper towel, Grant dusted his hand off on his pants and let it drop in frustration.  “Perception aside, for some damn reason she chose to trust me and I feel we need to leave here ASAP.”

Sadie nodded and leveled a beefy index finger at his chest.  “I think I see your point.”

A digital version of "Black Magic Woman" broke the silence.  Sadie removed a cell phone from an inside jacket pocket.

“This is Sadie.”  Her brow wrinkled as she listened to the voice on the other end of the line.  Peering at Grant with a wrinkled brow, she drew the phone away from her suddenly pale face and quickly crossed herself.  “This may be the company you been expectin’.”

She held the phone out to him, her eyes taking his measure soberly for the first time.

Grant stared down at it.  Conversing with whoever was on the other end was the last thing on his mind, but he knew there was no way out now.  Somehow, he had become the damsel’s sentinel.

Clearing his throat, Grant placed the chicken down on the table and gingerly took the phone from Sadie’s hand.

“Are you ready to stop these games now, Frederickson?” the voice on the other end inquired in a soft yet menacing voice.

Grant glanced up at Sadie and she gave him a nod as he distanced himself from her, starting through the yard amongst the stone angels.

“We would all like a peaceful resolution to this,” the voice said.

“So far that sounds like a reasonable objective,” Grant answered.

“All we want to do is talk to the girl.”

Grant stopped and glanced back at the trailer where Maddy lay asleep.  “I’m not an idiot.  Your actions so far do not reflect that.”

There was a pause on the other end of the line.  “We are aware of your IQ.  We know that you will listen to reason.”

Grant held his tongue and listened, his eye fixing on a fountain cherub that seemed to be making eye contact with him.

“As long as she runs, she will be a target,” the other informed Grant.  “If she chooses to stop and talk, we will listen.  It’s that simple.”

Grant swallowed awkwardly.  The voice was getting to him.  He was starting to make sense.  Immediately, Grant cleared his head and recalled for the first time all the questions he had been asking himself.  “Who are you?  What organization are you with?” he demanded.

“Who we are isn't as important as what we have the authority to do to anyone who stands between us and the woman you’re traveling with.”

Threat?  The hairs on the back of Grant’s neck stood up like red flags announcing a storm warning.  Grant started to move through the yard again. “Who is she that you want her so badly?  What is her importance to you?”

Momentary silence.  “She's not who you think she is.”

“Fine.  Who is she?”

“She's a danger to everyone she comes in contact with,” the ominous voice continued.  “She is… contagious.”

Grant’s pace increased along with his anxiety.  Angels began whipping past him as if taking flight.  “You’re saying she has a communicable disease?”

“You could say that.  Though the danger she represents is far worse than any bio-hazard.”

“Clearly I'm not as smart as your sources led you to believe. Spell it out for me.”

“Let me give you a comparative analogy,” the other told him.  “If space/time were flesh, the woman you’re traveling with would be a cancer eating away at reality.”

Grant abruptly stopped. He briefly stared down at the phone before returning it to his ear.

“That woman is a danger to all of us and we have the authority to dispense with anything or anyone who stands in our way including you and the old couple you’re using as human shields,” the voice said, its pace quickening slightly.  “We're aware of your position.  You owe Torres a particular sum of money.  It may be within our power to make this problem go away. For good.”

There it was: The threat followed by the way out and a carrot to keep the beast on the right path.

He barely succeeded in stifling the chuckle that had threatened to bubble bitterly from of his throat.

The other end of the line remained silent.

Click.

Without his uttering a word in response, they had known his answer.

14

Grant followed the sounds of a brass section into the confined space of the small trailer.  He held the door open, allowing his eyes to grow accustomed to the dingy darkness.  Whatever light there remained seemed to have stolen inside from around the peeling foil that had been taped over two small windows.  It was like a cave or an animal’s den, and a thought popped into Grant’s head that Sadie must be prone to migraines.  He wasn’t sure on what basis he had come by that information.

To his left was a clean, orderly kitchenette that smelled of the remnants of something delicious that had recently been cooked.  His eyes instinctively flashed down to the chicken wrapped in the paper towel that he held in his hand.

On his right was an alcove that included a television and a stereo with a turntable where the incongruous sounds of seventies-era Chicago played on an LP.  That was where he found Maddy, lying on a couch with her knees raised slightly up in the beginnings of a fetal position.

How she could sleep with the sounds of syncopated brass blasting into her ears was beyond him.

Out of instinct rather than logic, Grant shut the door as quietly as he could and slipped into a ratty green recliner that-- despite his best efforts to the contrary-- squeaked with age anyway.

Surprising enough, that was just enough noise to stir the sleeping form before him.

“I’m up,” came the sudden but dim reply, the voice of someone stirred from a deep sleep.  A gasp of a wide-mouthed yawn followed.

“It’s me,” he said, then considered his response of familiarity.  He was the closest thing to a familiar face this girl had in the world right now that he could utter a simple greeting like that.  Somehow, that fact made him sad.  Didn’t she have family?  Or friends?  Who was this person he had unwillingly joined destinies with?

As if he had spoken the words aloud, she rolled over and gazed at him with a pair of sleepy eyes and a gentle smile.

He leaned forward and laid the paper towel open upon the small stained coffee table before her, exposing the fried breast and thigh--the action, in retrospect, completed without a word of explanation, felt oddly to Grant like a priest presenting an offering.

Making a sound of excitement, Maddy immediately attacked the thigh.

Striding over to the turntable, Grant found the volume and turned it down.

“What, she didn’t have anything harder to sleep to?  No Iron Maiden?” he asked, shaking his head in wonder.  He returned to his seat to a wounded look on the sleeping girl’s face.

“Hello?  It’s ‘Beginnings,’” she simply stated. “From Chicago’s first album.”

“Good to know,” he countered.

“It’s a classic, you uncultured swine,” she continued, her mouth full, gesturing for him to take the chicken breast remaining on the table.

“If you say so,” he replied with a shrug, eying the chicken distastefully. His stomach had turned a cartwheel since the phone call. 

“When I’m stressed, the brass massages the tension out of my skull.  Something about the harmonics, I guess,” she speculated with eyes drifting to the window where she knew Sadie waited outside.  “Sadie told me that I would find something in here to help me relax.  I was afraid she meant weed or something, but she knows me better than anyone I can remember in a long, long time.  She’s miraculous really.”

Grant a felt momentarily itch of anger toward Sadie and wondered about the source of it.

“I don’t do any drugs by the way,” she added.  “Not that I have anything against it.  I just don’t like the way it warps my senses.  It makes me more paranoid than the average bear, and I don’t need to feel more of that, y’know?”

Attempting to gather his jumbled thoughts, Grant blinked at her in confusion and found himself looking away, his eyes falling on the framed photos on the walls.  Some of the pictures looked old enough to be turn of the century.  In one, a shriveled old man with riveting dark eyes wore a robe and a turban that reminded Grant of the Professor Marvel character in “The Wizard of Oz.”  Apparently, Sadie’s family had been at this gig for a long time.

Grant felt suddenly very young and naïve in this strange place, while oddly enough Maddy seemed right at home--wise beyond her twenty-something years and plugged into something ancient about which he had no perspective.  He felt completely out of his element.

“Something happened, didn’t it?” she asked, her voice reaching out to pierce his bubble of self-doubt.

“Your friends called me on Sadie’s phone,” he replied.  “They know we're here.”

She rolled slowly into a sitting position, dropping her bare feet to the floor and staring glassily at her shoes—worn tan flats-- as if dreading to put them on again.  “Of course they do. They've been following us every step of the way.”

“Then we should probably get going.”

Maddy made no effort to move, her eyes studying him defiantly.  “What did you tell them when they asked you to give me up?”

Grant met her eyes and sighed.  “Wow,” he could only say, shaking his head.

“I’ve been running a long, long time, Grant,” she said as way of explanation.  “I know their M-O.”

Grant settled back in his chair and stared at the pictures again.  Coming here was wrong.  Putting others in danger was reckless.  “He threatened to kill Sadie and her husband if we didn't cooperate.”

“Sadie's too high profile here in this neighborhood. They won't touch her. They're just trying to smoke us out, Grant,” Maddy responded sharply.  “What else did they say?”

Grant stared down at her shoes, thinking that the poor things looked like cowering dogs. 
I’ve got to get her something more comfortable
, he thought instinctively, and then quickly analyzed the thought.  Somewhere along the line, he had decided to stay with her a while longer.

“Something’s changed between us,” she continued.  “What did they say that’s making you feel differently about me?”

“They said that you're a danger to yourself and everyone around you,” he admitted.

“Did you buy it? Did you buy their story, Grant?”

“It raised a lot of questions.”

“Which questions?” she asked.  When he didn’t answer quickly enough for her, she snapped, “Grant, talk to me.”

“How long have you been running?”

“Two and a half years.”

“Have you ever considered just talking to them?  Seeing what they want?” he asked her.

“I know what they want, Grant.”

“How?”

“Because they held me captive for six months.”

Grant stared at her in disbelief.  He scooted forward slightly.  “Tell me.”

“At first they just wanted to study me. Poke me full of mind-altering drugs. To run tests.  They wanted me to tell them things. Things about foreign governments and economies.  They wanted me to tell the fortunes of strange men with hard to pronounce names.”

“Can you do that?”

“I already told you.  No, I can't. My visions are extremely narrow.”

“So why do they want you?”

“They don't want me. They just don't want anyone else to have me,” she told him.  “Did they tell you that they only wanted to talk to me?”

Grant gazed over at her with raised brows, knowing at this point it would be pointless to deny, even if he had wanted to.

“That’s what I thought,” she sniffed, finishing off her chicken thigh and reaching for the breast.  “That’s one of their tactics.  You gonna eat this?”

Grant shook his head as Maddy began to eat.  “They told me crazy stuff about warping reality,” he continued.

Clearing her throat, Maddy set the breast aside and squared herself off melodramatically toward him.  “Ok, it’s time I leveled with you, Grant,” she said in an overly serious tone. “I'm a time traveler from another dimension.”

Grant leaned back in his chair heavily and gave her a dull exasperated expression.

“Zero manure,” she snapped with a smirk. “I'm progressing forward in time from a dimension east of this point called Florida. It’s a very humid dimension, filled with a wrinkly blue-haired alien race called The Retired.”

“You’re from Florida then?”

“Born and raised,” she replied.

Grant rocked forward, his face set seriously.  “They say you’re contagious.”

Maddy snorted derisively and nodded.  “Didn’t you know that we can all warp reality, Grant?  Every single one of us.  If a single act of kindness can change the arc of an otherwise entirely miserable life, I’d call that a welcome change of reality, wouldn’t you?”

The words of the Blank Men had entered his mind and worked their evil magic, casting doubt on the woman before him.  But he knew she was right.

When Grant made eye contact with her again, he found truth and compassion staring back at him.

Maybe Sadie or Horace could lend her some shoes
, he thought.

“When you had this vision of yours at the streetcar? Are we together? At the end?” he asked her.

Maddy’s eyes slid away from his like fingers losing their grip and falling down a sheer cliff face.  “No. I die alone.”

As she picked up the remnants of her chicken and continued to eat, Grant moved an ottoman closer to the coffee table and sat directly across from her.  Eying him self-consciously, she finally set the piece of chicken aside and gave him her full attention.

“Explain something to me,” he asked, leaning toward her.  “Why does my taking the lead change how the day is going to end?”

“I’m not sure,” she admitted, her eyes going distant and foggy.  “Something about you, they can’t track… like they can with me.  Whatever it is, it seems to be working and I’m not going to question it.”

“Tell me what you see. All of it.”

“I'm in a swamp. There’s an old shack and cypress trees and moss and pelicans.  Y’know, like a backwoods bayou.”

Grant nodded and waved for her to proceed.

“I see the Blank Men coming for me. They have guns. I hear two shots. Then everything goes black.”

“Which bayou? Where?”

“My visions don't work that way.”

“Do you know what time of day?”

Maddy closed her eyes as she tried to recall.  “Evening,” she said emphatically.  “The sun is setting.”

Grant lowered his head and stared down at her shoes again.  Something about those poor lifeless things communicated surrender to him in a way that her words never could.

A simmering rage came to a boil within him suddenly.  He leapt up and stormed toward the door of the trailer, running his hands through his hair in exasperation before spinning back around to face her.  “So, now what? Are we going to wait here for a police escort?”

“Short of walking out the front door, I don’t know,” she answered, looking significantly up at him.  “Despite the fact that I don’t know the answer to your question, the fact remains that when you lead, I’m not haunted by the image of that lonely swamp.  You have to get us out of here, Grant.”

Sighing heavily, Grant threw his hands up in frustration.

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