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<title source="title1"> <default>Three Years</default> </title> <image source="image1">
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February 31, 3031
âI think itâs time.â
 âTime for whatâ¦?â
 âDonât tell me youâre still unconvinced.â
 âI just really like Tyler.â
 âSheâs a girlâ¦â
 âTyler can be a girlâs name.â
 âDo you want people to make fun of her for being a girl with a boyâs name? Need I remind you people are jerks.â
 âI might have more faith in society than you.â
 âNow youâre being a jerk.â
 âUh, thanks.â
 âSo itâs settled then.â
 âNo, itâs really not â stop staring at me like that! Okay! Fine. Name her what you want.â
 âNo, we have to do it together.â
 âAlright. Weâll name her what you want.â
 âSay it.â
 âHer name will be-â
 A ship wide klaxon pulled Aiden from his power nap. Something thumping against the wall next to him caught his attention, and he was astonished to see the sound was that of his arm hitting the bulkhead repeatedly. His very numb arm, that heâd slept with pressed behind his neck. It happened. Already he was getting the tinglies.
He remembered the ever present klaxon as it continued its incessant, fire alarm-like blare. Maybe it was the fire alarm. Aiden unslouched himself to his feet and exited the mess cabin into the shipâs central corridor, a utilitarian structure serving to bridge different parts of the ship, designed with as much a mind to fanciness and comfort as a prison block. He noticed the intermediary status lights were flashing blue. Blue alert, he pieced together, ruled out a fire. Rather it indicated the ship was landing.
To the rear of the corridor was a ladder leading up through a deckhead hatch, which he pushed open to enter the bridge of the starship, Renaissance. The blond haired pilot sat with his hands wrapped tightly to the controls, while a woman with dark red hair sat angled away at the comm station, furiously looking between different data monitors.Â
âThis ship is trash,â Mara repeated for the tenth time, seeing Aiden buckle into the next seat over, âweâre going shopping first thing when we land.â
âIf we land it,â the pilot muttered.
âYouâll land it,â Aiden said, although one look at the windows â or lack thereof - reduced the sentiment to sweet nothings. The cabin windows had all been shot out, thanks to an encounter with spaceborne Maelstrom not an hour before, and since layered over by the very opaque blast doors. Despite his instruments, Luke Mercury was flying blind.
â300 feet,â Mara reported when the ship gave an upward lurch sending debris flying.
âFelt like 3,â Aiden quipped.
âIt would seem,â Mara amended, âmy altimeterâs off.â
âWhat was that?â Luke called.
Mara did some quick calculations. âWeâre at 10 feet.â
Luke pulled the stick back.
âNO!â Mara yelled. âGO DOWN! WEâRE LANDING!â
âWeâre going too fast-â Luke protested.
âPOINT. DOWN.â
âIntrepid?â
âDo it,â Aiden affirmed, ignoring the incorrect name use in the momentâs panic. Mara grabbed the intercom receiver and speakers crackled to life across the downward pitching ship.
âAttention, passengers,â echoed Maraâs voice across the rest of the ship, âplease brace for impact, there is no cause for alarm,â and they fastened their auxiliary harnesses.
âHonestly I am pretty alarmed,â she said, turning around to face Aiden.
âYeah,â Aiden said, looking past her, past Luke, at the windowless window. âI rather not look that way either, but my seat doesnât rotate.â
Mara smirked. âHappy birthday,â she said, then the ship crashed.
. . .
According to the universal time widget on his iBrick, Aiden Talmid had turned nineteen years old the day before, and instead of seeing a concert, going out clubbing, or doing normal people things, he was eating freeze dried rations with a crashed shipâs crew outside the shipwreck of the aforementioned starship, a cargo cat christened Renaissance. Illuminated around the fire pit were the faces of the cousins Luke and Mara Mercury and the three others whoâd made the trek from Nimbus Station with him: a short, thin, red haired kid named Ben Talmid, although he was a Talmid in name only. He was the son of another dimensionâs Mara Mercury and Ray Handerson, but after Rayâs death the boy had been adopted by that same dimensionâs Aiden, who had married the widowed Mara after the death of his own wife, Kate.
Five years ago, Aiden would have blushed a deep red thinking about the relationships of such an interdimensional counterpart. Three years ago, he might not have cared at all. Things got pretty screwed up in the time between, and some things afterward, and so remained a lot of things. Now, he just needed to survive the night.
The next face was over thirty years old, a few weeks unshaven, and belonged to a man currently in the process of talking and eating at the same time. While his Nexus Force given name was Skilled Honored Ninja, he was also known as Shard. He was an interdimensional wayfarer like Ben, and from the same dimension. In between chicken wings he was mouthing out the names of constellations. âAnd thereâs the Wildcat, munch, that oneâs Aquila, and just over those trees, Hwin.â
The third accompanier, while not from another dimension, practically lived in one.  Her narrowed blue eyes followed a ballpoint pen held between manicured fingers, powering through lines of notes on the structures of the universe, the structure of Unverse, and the theories and equations behind breaking the wall between those two. Her lips were pursed in concentration between prominent, misnomered laugh lines. The girl rarely smiled, though she was not depressed. With indigo blue hair currently cut to shoulder-length, tied neatly in the back, and apparently natural, Juiliet Idyllia was the last passenger of Renaissanceâs final voyage.
âShard,â the girl cut in before the man could point out another obscure astrological sign, âno one cares.â
âClass act, Juiliet,â Shard said without looking down from the stars, while consuming another ketchup-dipped wing. âGood chicken, this chicken. You know, my astrological skills donât end at constellation identification â I can read the stars, too. Theyâre telling me your destiny, want to hear it?â
Juiliet flipped to a new page and resumed her frantic, blue ink shorthand. Without hesitation, she responded, âNo.â
âOh, itâs an important one. The stars say you could die.â
Luke coughed and snorted water out of his nose. âThatâs son of a gun. Thereâs always a chance we can die. Especially on this mission.â
âObjection,â Mara voiced. ââWeâ is inaccurate. Only Shard, Ben, Juiliet, and Aiden can die, because Iâm not stepping through that disruption.â She fixed Luke with a hard glare. âAnd neither are you, Luke. You are forbidden to die.â
Luke shrugged. âFine with me.â
âNo oneâs going to die.â Aiden said.
âYeah,â Mara sniffed, âand you said Luke would land the ship.â
âHe did.â
âI did.â Luke agreed.
âNo, you bumfuzzle. You freaking crashed the ship. You didnât even crash land it, just a good old crash. Crash, boom, bang, and shebang, weâre stranded on this goshforsaken planet.â Mara folded her arms. âIn the middle of nowhere.â
Shard pointed his chewing jaw to the southern horizon. âThereâs a city right there.â
âThatâs where you were supposed to land,â Juiliet dug.
âMay as well not be there, since no oneâs coming to rescue us.â Mara pointed out.
âPeople are jerks,â Aiden said.
âYeah.â Mara agreed.
âYeah.â Luke nodded.
âIâm inclined to agree.â Juiliet said.
âYeah.â Ben said quietly. âNow please shut up, all of you.â
Shard finished the last chicken wing. âYeah.â
. - -
âHey,â Mara said to him as Aiden was sorting his knapsack.
âYeah?â Aiden said, pushing a pack of modules off to the side â to be discarded with the ship, and from his pile of various weapons he selected his Pneumatic Drill of Blasting to slide into the bagâs depths.
âHappy birthday,â Mara said from the doorway.
Aiden did a mental calculation. âNow youâre two days late.â
âWeâre having a party when we get to Jericho.â Mara said, of the city that was their destination. âAll in honor of our very own Intrepid Fusion Eclipse.â
âAfter we buy a new ship?â Aiden reminded.
The girl waved a hand dismissively. âWe donât need a ship.â
Aiden shrugged away the about face. âOkay.â Then he reminded her, âI go by Aiden, now.â
âToo bad, youâll always be Intrepid to me. We donât need a ship right now, anyway. We have rockets.â Mara continued, while Aiden went back to sorting. In the pile of weapons, under a force blade, he found what he was looking for, the LW A47 VersÄ, etymologized from versatility, synonymous with multi, as the weapon was also called a multiblaster for its several uses: ranged weapon, flamethrower, thinking cap, stun gun, all in one, it was a device that could make Skilled Honored Ninja proud.
âAlmost twenty, huh,â Mara revived the subject again.
âIt doesnât really matter,â Aiden said, hooking the VersÄ to his belt and doing a quick peruse of the remaining items to organize. More rations, armor shine, healing potions, firecracker nades, flash bangs, a few contemporary models of handgun, a longsword, throwing knives⦠he crammed it all into the backpack and hefted it up. It felt heavier than before, considering his legs had cramped from sitting Indian-style on the floor for the last five minutes.
âReady to go?â Mara asked, shaking her head with impatience. The motion sent her bangs slapping across her face.
âOne moment,â Aiden lifted his hands over his head and stretched. He heard Mara snort at the inevitable lifting of his shirt. When he was done, he turned to the now vacant doorway and exited. The ship corridor was more busted looking than the day before, courtesy of Lukeâs landing. It got them from point A to point B, Nimbus Station to Jirdia, three thousand lightyears. Its job was done.
Once outside, he met with Luke, Mara, Ben, Shard, and Juiliet standing a couple hundred yards from the ship. In Lukeâs hand was a remote detonator.
âWhat are you-â Aiden started.
âThe starship Renaissance,â Luke began. âH class cargo cat, with a cockpit in the back, and ugly as heck. Yet having got us through a Maelstrom attack unscathed, we are forever in her debt.â
âNo, seriously,â Aiden tried again, âyouâre not blowing up the ship.â He made a dash for the blond boy â man, actually, Luke was twenty â colliding just in time to stop Lukeâs trigger finger from depressing the big red button.
âYouâve gotta be kidding me,â Luke protested, pushing his attacker off him â Aiden stepped back, grinning, the detonator now in his hand.
Then Mara caught him in a chokehold, the detonator flew into her other hand, and she pressed the button.
The explosion caused her to let go and Aiden whirled around in time to see Renaissanceâs nameplate be enveloped by the flames, along with its registration number, a trace of which would have revealed the shipâs titled owner as Intrepid Fusion Eclipse of the Leek Works Corporation.
âYou just blew up my ship,â Aiden stated. âThat cost me 10 million coins.â
âYou might get a hundred now for its scrap metal,â Ben said quietly.
âDamn you,â Aiden muttered. âNot you, Ben; Luke, Mara, damn you.â
Luke just sniffed and Mara cackled devilishly. Shard offered a resigned shrug. Juiliet returned to her notes and Ben stared at his feet.
Aiden shook his head.
. -
The fifteen mile walk off the beaten path to Jericho took all of the morning. By midday they entered the city and following the advice of Juiliet, natively from the planet, they quickly and inconspicuously began to mingle with the diversified population. Figorians of many races, faces, and manners of dress passed them on the streets of this modern, developed world. In their casually outrageous attires, the Renaissance team fit right in.
âShould have landed there,â Shard quipped, pointing out a landing port where every thirty seconds an airship would take off and another would land.
âNext time a Bazooka Stromling blows out our windows, you try flying.â Luke retorted.
Recalling Renaissanceâs fiery demise, Aiden stated, âNone of you are flying a ship of mine again.â
Mara laughed. âGood luck staying committed to that.â
She knew he wouldnât.
âWe should, like, get married,â she added.
âNow where would you get an idea like that?â Aiden said, knowing exactly where from.
The girl winked.
âHell no,â Luke cut in. âIâm not being that guyâs brother in law.â
âI thought they were cousins,â Juiliet spoke up as they approached, after ambling for half a mile down a busy road, to a bus stop.
âThey are,â Aiden answered her. âDestination check?â
Mara summoned her iBrick and reported, âA university parkway a mile past that hill,â speaking of a steeply elevated road leading up a hillcrest to the northwest.
âThink itâs faster by bus or walking?â Aiden wondered.
âIâm riding,â Luke declared.
âIâm with him.â Mara joined in.
Aiden shrugged.
Shard paused for a moment to sniff, âLazy people,â before walking by.
âNerd, itâs called saving energy,â Luke shot back.
Aiden shrugged. âCatch you later,â and entered a quick jog after the janitor, Juiliet, and Ben who had kept up their stride. Against the current of pedestrian traffic he caught up to them â although such a thing was pointless.
Their point of interest was more or less an entire swath of land that needed staking out, as not even the advanced radar technology gifted to Leek Works by the Nexus Force could pinpoint the exact location of any object in the universe â especially something as faint as a spatial anomaly five billion miles away from the nearest radar relay on a deep space Nexus Force starship. Splitting up was part of the plan.
- .
Seated on a lakeside park bench, sunglasses over his eyes and an iBrick held to his ear, Aidenâs focus was divided. Half of his attention was on the people in passing, primarily students from the local university, using the parkway to travel between campus locations. Others stayed put, enjoying the lakeside environment. His scrutiny was essential to ensuring the mission was a go. There could be no suspicion of foul elements.
So far, all seemed clear. Aiden had long ago confirmed his location was tangent to the projected epicenter of the disturbance.
Back on Nimbus Station, the Renaissance teamâs target had been described as a âdistortion in the consistency of fringe Unverseâ in the mission plan. As ascribed before, its exact location was not yet pinpointed, but that would change if Aiden and the others were successful. They carried three subspace repeaters for detecting, and amplifying, micro gravitational vibrations in space indicative of a nascent breach in Unverse, although the possibility of taking it beyond that remained in the theoretical.
âAsh Team reporting,â Juilietâs voice came across a secure line, âShard and I are in position with the receiver.â
âWynn Team reporting,â Aiden responded quietly, âacknowledged.â
âAny update from Ethel team?â
After a few moments of silence, Aiden grimaced and loudly mused, âTheyâre probably still on the bus.â
âWe can hear you, idiots,â said Luke. âWe are not on the bus. We are outside the library and trying to be inconspicuous.â
âAsh Shadow here; how inconspicuous of you to say that, mâLuke.â came Shardâs voice from Juilietâs location.
âDo you have an ETA?â Aiden asked.
âTwenty seconds,â Luke gave him.
Another line crackled to life. âWynn Auxiliary reporting,â came Benâs soft voice. Acting as Aidenâs shadow, he was observing Aiden and his surroundings from afar for threats. âWe have a Nexus Force Code Gray, advising an abort.â To Aiden, he instructed, âWithout turning your head, look to your right. Three benches down.â
Crap, Aiden thought, daring not to say anything nor so much as breathe any differently while doing as told. He panned his eyes to the right, past the point where his left eyeâs view was blocked by his nose â he couldnât quite move them separately, yet â and counted three benches down. The first supporting a cuddling couple, the next was occupied by some friends, and on the third one he saw her dressed in a simple dark coat. Long, almost black hair draped over her shoulders to brush her crossed arms. Like Aiden, she was facing straight ahead, which meant nothing as she too wore sunglasses. Like Aiden, they obscured the true direction of her attention, and in their immediate vicinities, they were the only ones wearing them.
âRepeat, please?â Luke asked. âDid you say abort?â
âI repeat, abort.â Ben confirmed. âItâs a Code Gray.â
âWhatâs a Code Gray?â Luke asked.
Shard audibly facepalmed. âFreaking check your log book.â
Through the receiver Aiden heard Luke grumble something. After a moment he sighed, âStanding by,â followed by affirmative three âstanding byâs from the rest of Ash and Ethel teams and their shadows.
He stared sidelong at the sunglasses girl three benches down again. In itself, a choice in attire was insufficient cause for suspicious. To request a mission abort, Ben had to have a pretty damn good reason to suspect this person, and from what Aiden could see, he was inclined to agree with Benâs call for a Code Gray, because he recognized this girl too. She was someone he hadnât seen in three years, since the last time heâd been hands on with Unverse. Theyâd fought but neither had won or lost, like equal and opposite. He didnât know her name or where she was from, and the only person he thought could, Tiberius Talmid, had disappeared a long time agoâ¦
If she was here, she probably recognized him, too.
Alright, Aiden thought to himself. âAlright,â he muttered to the team. The Code Gray call meant a person of interest had been identified, which to the Nexus Force meant a person in need of apprehension.
âWeâre on our way,â Juiliet responded with tight discipline, and at that moment the girl threw on a hood and stood up.
âBetter start running,â Aiden said, getting up too. He glanced up the hill behind his bench, where Ben was supposedly stationed. He didnât see him, as was the point of the shadow formation, but he presumed he was moving as well. Code Gray was a serious call sign, higher priority than most standing orders.
So until theyâd captured the mysterious transdimensional associate of Tiberius, or failed trying, the Unverse mission was off.
Shaking his head, Aiden almost lost the girl of interest behind a sudden crowd. In response he shoved his iBrick into a jeans pocket and removed his aviators, increasing his pace as the parkway spilled into a market street ideal for getting lost in. Aiden turned on his heel one way, then turned his head the other direction searchingly. Just like that, the target had disappeared.
Such a failure would look great on the report Juiliet was sure to write, he thought, when on the other side of the street, Aidenâs eyes fell on a black hood weaving between the heads of the other passerbys. The road looked clear so he dashed across. She slipped into a coffee shop, the door to which Aiden caught just before it closed, jumping over the threshold and spotting the table where the girl had taken a seat.
Aiden swung himself into the seat across and was about to say something, when the color of her hair stopped him, because it wasnât black.
Staring back at him, between parted red fringes, were quizzical brown eyes.
âSorry,â Aiden found his voice, getting up to leave. âI thought you were someone else.â
âIntrepid?â the girl asked, and he stopped mid-motion to recognize the sound of her voice, and then he really stared at her face.
âGoodness,â Aiden said, dropping back into the seat in shock at seeing the person heâd run into.
Kate dropped her hood and pulled out her earphones. âYeah, I⦠canât say I was expecting to see you, either.â
âNo, I definitely- I mean yes, I didnât expect to see you,â Aiden shook his head, suddenly flustered.
âI think itâs been three years,â Kate said.
âYeah,â Aiden affirmed, âit has.â
She leaned over. âYou look different,â she observed.
She did, too. Unobscured by the hood, her hair was longer than before. Her face had new dimensions, details, creases.Â
âWeâre older,â Aiden rationalized.
Kate ran a hand under her jaw and Aiden puffed out a laugh. âI havenât had the chance to shave since our ship crashed.â
âThat was you?â Kate asked, staring out the window momentarily in reconciliation. âI thought that was a shooting star I saw last night.â
âDid you make a wish?â Aiden asked.
Kate whirled back. âYouâre definitely different,â she said again, with conviction this time. âTalkative. More secure.â
He shrugged. âI also go by Aiden now,â he told her.
Kate crossed her arms in validation. âCase in point, Aiden.â
He smiled, and she grinned back. After a moment, her face reverted to a serious expression.
âWe have a lot to catch up on,â she said, looking out the window again, âand I was just grabbing some caffeine before my next class.â
âYou go to the university?â Aiden asked.
âDo you have a better idea for why Iâm back here?â she posed. âOn my home world?â
âOkay, I didnât know you were from here.â Aiden admitted. âAt all.â
âLike I said, weâre going to catch up.â Kate asserted, moving to leave, and Aiden got up as well. âAnd then youâll tell me what youâre doing here.â
âIâd like that,â he said, following her out of the shop. As they entered the street, he noticed a familiar face watching from the other side. She wasnât wearing sunglasses or a hood this time.
While he was momentarily distracted, Kate pressed something into his hand.  âGive me a call,â she said, and ran off. Looking down, Aiden saw sheâd given him a business card with a contact number.
When he looked back up across the street, the girl of interest was gone.
. . .
âIt seems weâre not the only ones interested in the potential of this Unverse disruption,â were the recorded words of Verbina Ingram in response to Juilietâs briefing on the dayâs turn of events on Jirdia, including the transdimensional girl Aiden hadnât run into that day. âThis was foreseeable.
âIn the meantime, our long distance triangulation efforts have refined the target area, the updated coordinates are attached to this message. Good luck, Renaissance team.â
Aiden closed his iBrick and stared ahead at the progress Luke and Mara had made on setting up their subspace repeater, which theyâd packed up again during the Code Gray, and had to unpack again. The updated coordinates placed the six of them within five acres of each other, well within walking and visual range, eliminating the need for separate teams in separate areas.
The new area of the park where they met up was scattered with artificial bodies of water, bordered with ceramic, adorned with fountains, and occupied with geese and goldfish. Stone walkways made winding paths around them all. A city like Jericho in a world like Jirdia had long reached the point of sociocultural maturity where all crime, petty, felonious, and terroristic was nonexistent due to unnecessity. As a result, they could set up their subspace repeaters as they pleased.
Working in close quarters also allowed them to watch each otherâs backs, as the transdimensional girl was surely watching them.
âAnd the diagnostics test, passed!â Luke said with a dramatic flair. Mara punched the air and Ben tapped Aiden on the shoulder.
âWeâre set for stage one,â the kid said.
Good, Aiden thought, about time. âLetâs get this started,â he said, following Ben back to their subspace repeater. Along the way he waved to Shard and Juiliet standing four hundred feet away on the other side of the lake with Ash Teamâs repeater. Narrowing his eyes, he panned his gaze and turned on his heel to get a full three-sixty. He didnât see any mysterious people, for what his eyes were worth in the evening light. He shrugged at Ben and turned back to their repeater. Diagnostic test results were currently on its display, tested positive, so Aiden hit the on switch and put his iBrick to speaker.
âAlright, crew,â he announced. âRepeaters to record.â
Ben turned a dial and stood back as the machine began to hum. The display was synced to the screens of the iBricks held by each Renaissance team member, and Ben observed the former while Aiden stared at the latter. The seismic bars had risen and now oscillated between two close points. There was spatial activity in the area.
âIncrease the sensitivity,â Aiden said and Ben rotated another knob. The bars reached an equilibrium and now reported a more precise range of distance.
âWeâve got data,â Juiliet announced.
âAll set here,â Mara said from their station.
âShut it down,â Aiden said and at Benâs hand the machine shuddered to a standstill, while the numbers remained on Aidenâs screen. 157.5 feet from his repeater, 208.64 feet from Juiliet and Shardâs, and 179 or 177 feet from Luke and Maraâs. That was all the data they needed. He opened the secure share tunnel with the nearest Nexus Force starship with instructions to pass on to Nimbus Station.
âWe could compute this ourselves,â Ben said.
âAye,â Aiden agreed, âand we have the injector.â They didnât need to say that it took long enough for Verbinaâs last message to reach them. On average, 36 hours at this distance. âBut we still need their clearance to proceed.â  He of all people knew that, and it disturbed him to no end, especially when small scale spatial anomalies were, by nature, fleeting.
And if he could get one step closer to breaching Unverse again by himself, he knew he wanted to do it.
âBesides,â Aiden added, while moving to pack up the repeater. It wasnât larger than a cubic meter and once disassembled, folded up nice enough to fit in two backpacks. âThereâs plenty to do on a world like this in the meantime. But I will ask you to work with Luke and Mara on taking these results and pinpointing the exact location of that disturbance.â Staring across the lakefront, he could see the other teams already packed up and headed back to their hotel for the night.  âSeems itâll be right on top of that drink,â he estimated.
âSo weâll need a boat.â Ben said.
Aiden turned back to him. âIf we donât have a response by next afternoon, Iâm authorizing us to proceed.â
Ben nodded. His dark red hair had gotten long and when he did that, his bangs flopped loosely across and back from his eyes amusingly. It made him look a lot like a certain Mara Mercury.
They made their way back to the road where pedestrian traffic remained ever steady in spite of the encroaching night. On the walk, as they passed a coffee shop, Aiden remembered his chance encounter with Kate. Taking out her business card, he added the number to his contacts and wrote a quick message. Want to meet? â Aiden.
Come to the Esplanade, Kate responded.
âMeeting someone?â Ben asked when they got to the lobby but Aiden kept walking.
âYou figure right,â Aiden said, and he asked, âYou remember Kate?â before realizing it was a stupid question.
Benâs face dipped grimly. âIn my dimension⦠we all remember Kate.â
Of course they did.
âSheâs here,â Aiden told him, then he continued walking.
The Esplanade was a long seaside tract on a gentle slope, the elevated half grass and the other half sand, on Jerichoâs eastern bay edge. Sailboats, sun boats, and row boats were docked in rows along piers extending far into the bay. On land, where Aiden walked, small stalls, booths, locker rooms, benches, and gazebos were scattered at various points. Needless to say it was a busy locale even at night, with lights in various colors providing illumination to most of the tract, but leaving some pockets in shadow. Music from different sources and a thousand conversations blended into a general hubbub that finding one Kate in would be impossible, if she hadnât sent Aiden a set of coordinates leading to the edge of a pier, where she sat next to a pair of sneakers. At Aidenâs approaching footfalls she looked over her shoulder and smiled.
âYou made it,â she said.
âNot a party person?â Aiden asked.
Kate smiled, âI like the calm,â and reached for the shoes.
While she took her shins out of the water and got up, he looked across the big blue. The salty tang in the air and the bay wind brushing against his hair reminded him of days standing on Avant Gardens and Nimbus Station, overlooking the blue swirls of shark-ridden ocean separating the worlds from the expanse of space. Heâd spent a lot of time looking, contemplating, and wondering there. He saw where Kate was coming from.
âI appreciate calm, too,â Aiden said.
Kate finished tieing her laces.
âSo Iâve done some wondering,â Kate said, giving him a thoughtful expression, âwhy you could be here, of all places in the universe.â
Aiden flashed her a smile. âWant to share them?â
âNo, theyâre stupid,â Kate laughed. âI rather you just tell me, if you can.â
Aiden put his hand in his pockets and stared back, considering. âIâm not sure,â he admitted, âitâs pretty classified.â
âOh, Iâm sure you can tell me, Iâm Nexus Force,â she said with a smile.
âI thought you left the Nexus Force,â Aiden said.
âI did,â Kate responded, âbut I bet whatever youâre doing here, I can help.â
She was right, Aiden thought, especially considering sheâd been on the planet for the past three years. âHow about we talk as we walk,â he said, and they headed for the boardwalk, âbut know that sharing knowledge of this mission is on a need to know basis. Few in the Nexus Force even know what weâre doing here.â
At his side, Kate nodded back. âGot it.â
Aiden considered a moment, glanced around, then began. âWeâre trying to create a breach in Unverse.â
He looked back to her to see her response, but when she wasnât there he spun on his heel to see her standing the amount of silent paces behind him.
âWhatâs wrong?â he asked tensely, while panning his eyes for threats, wondering to himself, had she been shot?
âOh, Aiden.â Kate sighed. âI thought⦠I was hoping, youâd have moved on." Her expression conveyed a sense of disappointment and immediately Aiden knew what she meant. And he was disappointed, too, to have disappointed her. What she didnât say, but he knew she was thinking, was that he was not so different after all.
For a moment, Aiden wondered, was she right? Had he really been chasing the same goal for the past three years?
âIâm sorry,â he said.
âItâs okay,â Kate said, and quickly smiled brightly. âIâll still help you out.â
âOh, I appreciate that,â he said, breathing inward and fixing her a genuine return smile. He didnât intend to give her too many details, that was always advised when sharing intel. He recalled one thing that was a new development for the mission, a direct cause for concern, and could possibly affect the outcome if left undealt with.
âDo you remember back in the Dimensional war,â he asked, âthere was a girl working for Tiberius?â
Kate nodded with a slight grimace of empathy. âShe did a number on you.â
âSheâs here.â Aiden said. âAnd we donât know why.â
Kate stepped closer. âDoes she know youâre here?â she hissed.
âSurely.â
âItâs got to be the same reason youâre here,â Kate said with certainty. âUnverse.â
âIâve figured as much,â Aiden agreed. âSheâs elusive.â
âI remember,â Kate laughed. Seriously, she advised, âWeâll just have to wait till she shows up again.â
âIâm glad you say we.â Aiden said.
She smiled. âMe too. Itâs just like old times.â She stared at the night sky, âWell, until as aforementioned occurs⦠do you have a place to stay?â Far enough down the beachfront from the rest of the Esplanadeâs light pollution, the stars were visible at the boardwalk.
âWeâve got a hotel,â Aiden told her.
âLuke and Mara?â Kate asked.
âAnd some others,â he disclosed.
âJust like old times,â she repeated. âIâll walk you there.â
âYou donât have to,â he said, but she shook her head.
âWe might be going in the same direction,â she said cheerily, âitâs one way to find out.â
By the time theyâd made it to the main street, Kate was pointing out locales. Â âThereâs a good apparel store down that road.â Â âThatâs the best pizza place.â
A familiar logo caught his eye. âDidnât know thereâs a Nexus Force office down here,â Aiden said, recognizing the familiar white starburst logo behind the window of an otherwise decrepit storefront. Narrowing his eyes, Aiden made to cross the road.
âItâs not Nexus Force,â Kate said, following behind him, while he read the words beneath it. âNow recruiting,â and he saw she was right. In small font, the front signage read, âAnswer the Call, Save Imagination, Join the Vortex Force.â
Aiden stiffened.
There were some things to dislike about the Nexus Force, heâd admit. As a small business owner and private operative, he knew.  But this was worse.
He looked at Kate and continued walking. âWhatâs this address?â he asked, while reaching for his phone.
â1535 Main,â Kate said, shifting her eyes from him to the side, but smartly not looking behind at the target they were obviously now avoiding communion with.
He dialed into the mission channel and said into his phone, âWe have a Code Bob. 1535 Main Street. Situation: Awaiting intel.â
Someone clicked in and most inappropriately yelled back, âWhatâs a Code Bob?â
Aiden cringed and Kate laughed softly. âClassic Mara,â she said, while Aiden toned down the volume and directed his feet to a sidewalk bench, which he sat down on. Kate took the spot next to him.
âYou remember the Faction War,â Aiden said.
âThat was a thing.â Kate acknowledged. âAlthough it was over by the time weâd returned⦠Cyclone and I.â
âHow long has that shop been open?â Aiden asked.
âItâs not closed, if youâre wondering.â Kate said.
âThen itâs not over.  The Faction warâs not over.â Aiden said, putting his mouth into a grim, straight line. And there was another block in the road between him and Unverse, except this one couldnât get up, disappear, and dismiss itself. It was hiding in plain sight. It was a Code Bob, named after the satire piece exposing Bob, the Nexus Force hero, as a spy for the Darkitect.
âWho is it?â Kate whispered.
âParadox Rogues,â Aiden said.
- - -
He made his way around the buildingâs corner to its rear fascia. As expected, a heavy looking steel door served as a service door. With that, he turned on his heel and walked back, every step putting the storefront another step behind him, and... he turned around to see Kate staring at him.  He waved and continued walking to the hotel.
In a short while she caught up with him.  âWhere are you going?â she hissed. âThe place is unguarded.â
He glanced at her. âYou thought we were breaking in?â
âI thought you were breaking in,â she corrected.
He stuffed his hands into his pockets and flexed the seams with his fingers. âI called a Code Bob,â he explained, ânamed after the satire piece supposedly exposing Bob as a spy for the Darkitect.â
âThat was satire? I remember people taking it pretty seriously.â
âMaybe they did⦠after the fact, the official version of the story is a satire.â He checked his iBrick for radio chatter, then picked up his pace. âSorry for getting off track. Thereâs protocol for things like this. Iâm following it.â
âYouâre following it,â she repeated, not attempting to hide the incredulous nature of the statement. âThatâs not like the Intrepid I knew.â
âYou said so yourself Iâm different now,â Aiden reminded, and she folded her arms in response.
âOnly in some ways,â Kate said after a moment. By this time, they reached the entrance of the Silver Archway Hotel, with its signature brushed metal arch â inside it was a line of smaller arches, security gates, of which he walked up to one. âYouâre seriously staying here?â
Aiden swiped an ID card and the security gate opened. He stepped through, turned around, and gestured to a small, spoked logo on the gateâs edge.  âItâs Nexus Force sponsored.â
âOf course.â She pointed a finger, but didnât touch, another small logo, this one printed in block text, Dekairie Defense. âWhat happened to Leek Works? The whole staying independent thing?â
Aiden felt himself taking on a forlorn look. âIt... helps to have official clearance. And actual resources. Luke and Mara, we all agreed to accept the Nexus Forceâs employment. The site itself is closed, though. They get us, but they donât get that. We wonât make all the mistakes of the Future Dimension.â
âBut youâre still making mistakes,â Kate repeated. The gate began beeping, warning of automatic closure now that Aiden had already stepped through. Beep. Beep. Beep. She stayed on the other side.
âI know,â Aiden acknowledged, and he shook his head while saying it. Â âBut itâs necessary.â
âIs it?â Â She spoke so softly, he barely heard the words.
âWeâre close,â he continued. âWeâre using borrowed tech, so we need clearance for the next step, but when we get itâ¦â He could still picture the next step.  Distortions in the air, a pressure shift that made ears pop, a barely audible infrasonic roar, and the blue-white glare of a vortex.
Beep, beep, beep.
On the final note, a forcefield snapped back into the gate, visible for the split second that it spliced the air, before a gentle hum set in.
âGood night, Aiden, and good luck.â Kate said, and she gave him a small smile.
âGood night,â Aiden bid, and she stepped into the night, but not before he noticed her take on a troubled expression.
Mildly bothered, Aiden turned and crossed the hotel plaza.  In the lobby, which was darkened at this time of night, he made for the edge of the grand staircase, gripping the woodgrain banister as he climbed the stairs and sifted his thoughts. The mission obviously didnât impress Kate, and he didnât pretend otherwise. Hell, to say she was less than put off would be pretending.
He shook his head as he rounded the landing to the hall with his suite. Luke, Mara, Juiliet, Shard, and Ben each had one of their own, in completely different areas of the hotel, so itâd take more than one well-placed assassinâs bomb to take them all out. He snorted. It wasnât just his imagination that inspired such arrangements. Secret Nexus Force Agent was a dangerous job.
With another swipe of his ID card, he authorized entry into his suite, then jammed his key into the electric door lock. Absent authorization, a lockpicker would be electrocuted. Petty, since anyone serious enough would just shoot the door down.
Applying a twist to the key, Aiden noted that it couldnât rotate, meaning it was already unlocked... heâd left it locked, of course. Grunting, he prepared to shove the door open and confirm his suspicions, while considering how itâd been done. A small scale EMP to disable the electric shock? Or arc-proof gloves? Or taking the master key off the clerk. One way or another, Aiden stood corrected. Someone serious enough could break in without removing the door, and apparently, she was; she, being the person of interest, the Code Gray, the associate of Tiberius, the mysterious girl with the almost black hair. Who else?
He was even hopeful, for a second, that it could be Red.
Itâs late, and who am I kidding, Aiden wondered, and he threw the door open and stepped in, only to stand for another correction. Pursing his lips, Aiden looked around and nodded, then he drew the multiblaster from his holster. Of course.
The room was in order, the bed was still made, nothing was out of place, and heâd expected what he saw, at least partially. Standing next to the couch, dressed all in black, athletic clothes, with her trench coat folded up and perched on the backrest, revealing the loaded belt of weapons around her hips, was Tiberiusâs associate. She reached for a weapon but was stopped by the third person in the room.
Seated on the couch was Tiberius Talmid, at whom Aiden was pointing the multiblaster.
âExplain why I shouldnât send you where you sent-â Aidenâs voice cracked, and he cursed. â-Where you sent my family.â
Tiberius smirked bashfully. âYour gun can really do that? Iâd ask you to shoot it.â
âYou have ten seconds.â Aiden growled.
Tiberius maintained the nerve to smile. âShe could stop you in an instant.â
Aiden kept the weapon levelled. âEight seconds, Tiberius, no extensions. Howâd you get in?â
âTransdimensional rift.â
âImpossible.â
âThe bonds of Unverse are weak on this planet. Jirdia, itâs called? Quite peculiar.â Tiberius stroked his beard with one hand and checked his watch with the other. âIâd advise you to look into it, deeper in fact, if that isnât telling too much⦠how many seconds have we left?â
Aiden shook his head. âNone. Youâre on borrowed time. Keep talking.â
âAbout what, dear nephew?â
âYou truly opened a Transdimensional rift into this room?â
âJust from the other side of the door. The bonds are weak, but still very much there, thanks to you and Kate and that device your friends from the other dimension cooked up. Mind you, Iâve been working just as hard as you to crack Unverse open again.â
âNot using Maelstrom again, Iâd hope, for your sake,â Aiden warned.
âIâve raised my standards.â Tiberius shrugged. âOthers have not.â
âWhat others?â
âThat would be saying too much for your ears right now.â
Aiden frowned. âTiberius, Iâm holding a gun.  Spit.â
âFine,â the man scowled. âThe Paradox Rogues are building a Transdimensional gate of sorts, only two miles under Dekairie Defense Company headquarters, so Iâve heard. Happy now? Stop pointing the gun at me, now?â
âMy room, my rules.â Not taking his eyes, or the gun, off Tiberiusâs direction, Aiden reached for his iBrick.
The girl looked eager to make a move, but Tiberius raised a hand. âAiden, the Nexus Force canât be involved.â
âWhy not?â
Tiberius pointed downward. âThe bombs.â
âWhat bombs?â
âThe Rogues have a few tonnes of Maelstronium down there. This is a huge operation, and a huge secret that couldnât occur if they thought the Nexus Force knew about it. Think about it, Aiden. If the Nexus Force realizes whatâs going on, whatâs to stop them from pressing the button? The entire hemisphere would be infected.â For once, Tiberiusâs expression was grave. âYou know the Rogues have a fifth column in Nimbus.â
âThen how do you know this is happening?â Aiden asked.
âNot all things, but nonetheless sometimes, some things, events, and histories are shared across dimensions.â Tiberius stared into Aidenâs eyes beseechingly, as if begging for belief. âThis is one of them.â
âSoâ¦â Aiden pressed, âwhich dimension had this happen before?â
âMine,â said the girl, from whose mouth Aiden had never heard a word spoken before.
âSo you do speak,â Aiden stated. He turned back to Tiberius. âWhy do you care?â
âEver since you went full conscript,â Tiberius said, with all seriousness, âand with the knowledge advantage I have, I decided someone had to take your place as protector of the multiverse, or whatâs left of it, and-â
Aiden didnât hear the rest under his laughter. Tiberius protecting the multiverse was too funny. He bet Mara and Luke would get a kick of it, too.
Then someone kicked him in the face and he was falling backward, the multiblaster flying from his hand. He hit the ground, which lucky for his head, was carpeted, while inwardly cursing Tiberius and the girl. Then the girl was pulling him back to his feet with one hand, which promptly shoved him into a chair pulled over by Tiberius. Her other hand gripped a weapon. The tables had turned.
Then Tiberius handed him his multiblaster back from where it had fallen, a gesture that Aiden could appreciate, before he and the girl then took seats opposite Aiden.
âAlright, cut to the chase, what in hell do you two want from me?â Aiden demanded.
âTo get the Rogues off this planet,â Tiberius said. âPrimarily, stop the Maelstronium threat.â
âMaelstronium,â Aiden repeated.
âMaelstrom ore,â the girl defined.
âIs it for their transdimensional gate?â Aiden wondered aloud. âTo open a rift?â
âIn this capacity,â Tiberius said, âin this location, Iâd say itâs highly plausible.â
âYouâd never use it, though,â Aiden said.
âAs I said, my standards have risen. A rift opened by such means would be a gateway to straight here from the Maelstrom Dimensions.â
âDimensions,â Aiden repeated. âI thought there was just one.â Putting his iBrick down, Aiden took out a notepad instead, rested it on his edge of the table, and began scribbling notes.
âNo,â the girl said, âthereâs isnât.â
âAs if you know more,â Aiden said, looking up, and for the first time, even in the dimmed evening lighting of the suite, he could really study the subject of mystery. She had dark, almost black hair like Tiberius. There were likewise features in her face familiar to him. Angular eyes, a wideset jaw, pointed nose, dark eyes, but not just like Tiberius, she was like other members of the family. Like himself. Like a long lost relative who heâd never known of. But oddly, impossibly closer than that, and also, fascinatingly, wrong.
She stared back, making eye contact, and in those eyes Aiden saw the same comparing, calculating thoughts behind the gaze, searching, finding.
âWho are you?â Aiden asked.
She studied him for a long time, while he waited, in dreadful anticipation, for her answer. She seemed at conflict with herself, what to say, how to answer.
âIf weâre going to work together,â Aiden pressed, in a low voice but firmly, âI need to know.â He glanced at Tiberius. The old man was silent.
She spoke at last, the words tumbling over emotional stumbling blocks. âMy name, my birth name, is lost. I donât remember it.â
âOh.â Aiden said. He wasnât sure if he believed her.
âSo now I go by Lost. Weâre not from the same dimension,â she continued.
Heâd figured that much. âBut a parallel one,â Aiden ventured.
âA Maelstrom one,â Lost nodded, âwhere the Nexus Force was attacked and defeated, by Maelstrom from two other dimensions. I was made a transdimensional agent, working for the Maelstrom, infected enough to use the Arms of the Vortex for transportation, but on an excursion to this dimension⦠I was liberated.â She turned to Tiberius
Aiden turned to face his uncle as well. âYou⦠disinfected her?â
âShe arrived to my...â Tiberius chose his next word, ââ¦laboratory, back home on Elistra, only partially infected. I knew about Maelstrom and Imagination. I knew how to work them, as you know, although you may or may not agree. I did what I would anyone. This was after the attack, of course.â
âEverything I know about my past,â Lost continued, âTiberius and I discovered from data left from the Maelstrom attackers.â
âLost has truly helped me, immensely, with everything. We searched the old battlefields for data of all manner,â Tiberius described, âany clues to help me find the answers to all the questions I had⦠where had the Maelstrom come from? Where had they gone? Where had our people gone?â He paused, and added, quietly, âWhere did our family go? Many, many people seemed to have disappeared.â
âDid you look in the cemetery?â Aiden asked with purposeful bitterness.
âI bid you not to get wound up on that,â Tiberius advised.
Aiden stared at him hard. âThatâs my prerogative.â
âI know what happened to Evelyne and I swear, I am sorry-â
âThen youâre a liar,â Aiden stood up from the chair and faced Tiberius. âI donât know how useful you are in a firefight. The girl, I mean Lost, I know is good. But two aint enough for this... Itâs a suicide mission without my team.â
Tiberius looked up in alarm. âI told you the Nexus Force canât be made aware-â
âWe know how to operate independently,â Aiden said, while Tiberius frowned in thought. âHell, thatâs why you came to me in the first place.â
âSome of you can be trusted,â Tiberius agreed, âfor sure, the Mercurys.  The extradimensioners. Iâm worried about the blue girl.â
âJuiliet,â Aiden nodded. âYou havenât had a chance to meet her yet, lucky for her. Leave my team to me. I trust her.â
âThe wellbeing of this planet is hinged on your judgement,â Tiberius warned. âAnyone you didnât trust, I could lock away for a while-â
Aiden stared at him hard. âDonât disgust me. You asked me for help, and Iâm giving it, so youâd better trust me.â He turned to Lost, as well, who had stepped back and not interfered between them for once. âThat goes for you as well.â
Lost nodded.
âIâm going to wake up the rest of the team, and debrief them so nothing nasty happens when they see you two here,â Aiden said. âGather up supplies. Iâm sure you know how to do that.â
He turned to leave the suite, opened the door, and made it out to the hall, halfway to the Mercurysâ suite when Tiberius called his name, and frowning, Aiden turned back to face him. He let Tiberius approach, and when they were close enough to converse discreetly, Tiberius said quietly, âThere is⦠more I have to tell youâ¦â
âOh?â Aiden said. âYouâre volunteering info?â
âIâm debating with myself,â Tiberius said. âI know it. Lost doesnât know. You donât know.â
So itâs about Lost, Aiden thought. âWell?â
âItâs not relevant,â Tiberius decided then and there, ânot now. When you come back, ask me.â
Aiden reached for the multiblaster, and Tiberius smiled, putting a hand to Aidenâs holster. âI wonât play that game again. You wouldnât shoot me.â He pushed the weapon back in.
âNo,â Aiden agreed. Not now, perhaps, but believe me, there have been times where Iâd like to do nothing more.
He smiled. Tiberius smiled. The two parted ways for the moment. Aiden had a mission to do, and after rounding up his team, introducing Lost as a friend, and explaining the circumstances, theyâd need access, presumably, to the depths of Dekairie Defense Company. Another coincidental link. Coincidences were aplenty on this entire trip so far. Now heâd have to meet Kate again.
April 4, 3031
It was first light, and like the day starting so began a new calm. Behind his back, the hulking mass of concrete supported a bridge up and over from his side of the river to the other. His eyes followed its span and back to his secret place where he stood now, a little green cove to go when needing peace. But peace was not what he needed now. He needed support, like the support the bridge had, but not so much for himself, but to give to his wife.
âI think this means weâre not ready,â she said so softly, and in the audible deadness of the morning, he heard her clearly.
 He didnât know what to say, and he said nothing while pulling himself off his support. He stepped across the sand and pebbles to stand by her. In spite of a jacket, she was shivering, and he reached out-
 She retreated fast. âDonât-â she warned, staring at her hands. âI donât trust my-â
 Her hands closed into fists.
 Her eyes closed.
 This time she let him put an arm around her shoulders. Then she broke down.
 âKate,â he heard himself saying. "Weâve been, and weâre in this together. Through everything. Look at me.â
 She did.
 âItâs not your fault.â
. . -
 Aiden woke up, momentarily lost. When he opened his eyes, he was in his suite at the Silver Archway. When he closed them, the image of the cove stayed fresh in his mind. He blinked. It was still there. He closed his eyes longer⦠and it faded to memory.
He lifted an arm, rotated his cuff. The feeling of holding Kate was still there. Like it wasnât just a dream, but it had actually happened. He wasnât sure, now, because this dream had been more vivid than the others. He never forgot them, but he never knew what was going in them.
But this time he knew.
Not everything, but something specific from a different manâs life. More than Rowana had ever told him. More than what the Future Dimensionâs Intrepid Fusion Eclipse had ever put in his Leek Workâs files, that Aiden had since inherited.
It felt so real, the failure, the guilt, the pain.
It was real.
The pain of losing a child.
- - .
Aiden spent some time facing the windows, letting the blur of pedestrians passing the coffee shop lull him into a contemplative trance of sorts, while he waited for Kate. Theyâd scheduled a meetup that morning for reasons heâd tell her when she was there. The Nexus Force communications network that his iBrick connected to was monitored, he knew, and Tiberius had been clear about keeping the Nexus Force out. What the Nexus Force knew, the Paradox Rogues knew, too.
It took some convincing, but after an open group discussion with his entire team, and Tiberius and Lost present as well, theyâd agreed to keep this under wraps until the operation was complete, or things got out of control, the latter requested by Juiliet. If they needed help, the Nexus Force was a panic button away. Tiberius had accepted that, since things would be pretty dire at that point anyway. As well, Tiberius had presented all the files to prove that his intel about the Rogue operations was accurate.
He saw a familiar head bobbing in the crowd, and Aiden stopped reflecting on the past nightâs rather tiring events to smile as Kate entered the shop. She jumped straight into the booth seat across him, and into conversation. âSo, whatâs the big secret that you canât text or even call about? âNeed to see you in person,â itâs got to be important.â
âWell,â Aiden said, inching forward in his seat and lowering his voice, âI prefer face to face communication. I think itâs more honest.â
She raised an eyebrow and leaned forward too. âI agree with that. So, what do you want to be honest about?â she asked back.
âTo be honest,â he said, lowering his voice with each word until he was practically silent under the general ambience, a trick heâd learned in discretion, âIâm going to be straightforward, my team and I need to get into Dekairie Defense headquarters.â
He waited to make sure she heard the request. She nodded, then whispered conspiratorially, âI can do that⦠but why?â
âIâll tell you, but it needs to be kept a secret. From everyone. The Nexus Force doesnât know,â he added, âand it needs to stay that way. And you know how much I stick to regulation now.â
âI can keep classified intel,â Kate said, folding her fingers together on the table. âTell me what this has to do with my familyâs company.â
âThereâs a Paradox Rogue operation taking place in the company right now,â Aiden said, âand it must be stopped. That means theyâve infiltrated the company. If youâve noticed anything strange-â
Kate held up a hand, and her stare was dead serious. âIf what you say is true, it explains a lot, and I can tell you more about it. Do you know what their operation is?â
âTheyâre building some sort of unverse breacher.â
Kate looked at the table and said something quietly. âAlways about unverse. Sorry,â she said, looking back up. âAnd after you stop them⦠what will you do?â
He hadnât thought that far ahead, he realized, mostly because he didnât have the time to after Tiberiusâs late-night revelations. âIf weâre successful, my team will continue with the original mission. Thatâs why I came here, to breach unverse.â
âTo breach unverse,â Kate echoed. âThatâs whatâs important to you.â
âItâs been for the past three years.â
âAiden,â she asked softly, a strange expression coming across her face, âhave you considered settling down?â
Startled, he met her gaze.
âAfter this matter with the Rogues is over, I mean,â Kate clarified, âyou can stop being involved in war. I intern with a company thatâs all about improving life for people â there could be a place for you there. Here. With me.â
She was looking at him so seriously, and Aiden felt his face contort into a look of surprise, and Kate smiled a nervous smile.
Fate.
She was actually asking himâ¦
Fate.
Butâ¦
âKate,â he said, âIâm doing this to find Red.â
Now she looked surprised- no, disappointed. âWhoâs-â she started, then she shrank back. âOh, I⦠Iâm sorry. I should have realized after this time you could have⦠found someone else.â
Aiden blinked, confused. âNo, itâs not like that.â She should know. Had she forgotten? âYou know Red, sheâs-â our daughter, he thought, but she really wasnât, â-sheâs Red. Red is Red.â
Kate was twirling a strand of her hair and when he said that she stopped. âWow.â She looked away.
âThatâs not what I meant.â Aiden persisted. âYou know Red. From the Future Dimension. She gave us the Unverse bomb. She helped us stop the invasion!â
She shook her head and stood up.
To leave.
âKate-â Aiden started to rise after her but stopped himself at the edge of the table. He gripped it hard. She should know, he thought. She should know! Why doesnât she know?
She slid out of the booth and, after a moment, looked back, a sad look on her face. âAiden, I donât know who this Red is youâre talking about â and I donât think I want to know.â Her voice caught, she took a breath, and she let it out shakily. âAnd I donât know who Iâve been talking to â I donât know if I ever knew.â
Then she ran out.
âDate gone wrong?â a waitress asked.
âI wish,â Aiden muttered, allowing himself to sink back into his seat, shaken by what transpired. Kate was interested in him- had been, was more accurate. But how could Kate not know Red? Red was the one whoâd told Aiden to save Cyclone and Kate from Earth, and sheâd had to remind him, because-
Oh.
When somebody leaves the universe, it is only normal that the universe forgets them.
Kate forgetting Red meant that Red had left the dimension.
So why could he still remember?
. . . .
On exiting the coffee shop to walk off his tension, Aiden brought up the team messaging program, while thinking of how to run a little test. When he was done thinking, he typed out, âDo any of you remember Red?â He had a picture of Red on his phone, and he wanted to send that too â but was it on this phone? He changed equipment often over time. He searched anyway but couldnât find it. He was sure he could find a picture from the Future Dimension archives, which were currently locked away in the Crux System, so out of his immediate access. Still, he had other options. He let his feet take him to the campus park, which was open and quiet. Once seated at a picnic table, he sourced a notepad and pencil, and began sketching.
Regardless, he received dissenting answers. No one knew a Red.
Aiden was aware that time passed as he continued drawing. Every now and then he paused to sip his energy water. Artistry was not his strongest skill, but he could make do. When he finally looked up at his surroundings, the sun had changed places from in front of him to behind, and there was another personâs shadow cast next to his.
He took a photo scan of his sketch and turned to face Lost. âSitting here long?â he asked.
She shook her head. âNot as long as you.â
He raised an eyebrow. âStalking me long?â
âI know what happened.â
Aiden sighed, and turned back to his drawing. âSomeone will have to talk to Kate again. Sheâll still want to help.â
âIt just canât be you.â
âNoâ¦â he pulled the corners of his mouth taut in thought. âTell me,â he said, âdo you recognize this person?â
Lost looked down at the partial portrait. As she did, Aiden discreetly studied her. She looked so familiar, familial â but who was she really? She looked up then. âThatâs the Future Dimension girl. I donât know her name.â
âYou remember Red?â Aiden blurted out with enough incredulity to startle Lost. âThank god Iâm not the only one. No one else on my team remembers her, not even Shard and Ben. And Kate didnât. But I remember, and you remember.â He regarded Lost, with her aggravatingly familiar face. âWhy can we remember?â
They both pondered the thought in silence.
Who else could he ask?
Verbina maybe, and although he hated to admit it, Tiberius.
âTiberius might know,â Lost suggested.
Aiden nodded. âWe can go back, see him, and update the rest of the team.â He stowed his supplies, while Lost began unpacking hers.
âI got food,â she said, âwhen I saw you were here awhile. For me, and you.â
âOh.â Aiden looked at what she set on the table. It was actual takeout, as opposed to rations and such things, and he was hungry. âThank you.â
She nodded.
Being on the same side wasnât so bad.
-
Anticipating inevitable awkwardness, they kept their picnic brief before heading for the planned rendezvous at Silver Archway for a second team meeting. Aiden knocked on the door to Luke and Mara's suite this time, and Ben answered to usher them in. It was a mirror image of Aiden's room, complete with a lounging area where the rest of the team were scattered about. The Mercurys were seated side by side on one couch, and Tiberius lounged on the the opposite couch. No other chairs were present. Shard leaned against the wall while Juiliet sat crosslegged on the floor with a laptop, next to whom Ben took a spot. "Lots of floor," he said, looking up at Aiden and Lost.
Shaking his head, Aiden copied Shard and took a wall, while Lost went behind the couch to lean on the backrest beside Tiberius, who looked up and smiled at her presence.
"The files we're about to see were acquired by the Mercurys," Juiliet credited, "so thank them." Shard clapped softly while Luke reached over to dim the lights, as Juiliet aimed the laptop to the one empty wall and activated its projector. On the wall appeared dark blue building schematics. It looked like a modestly storied tower with a wide, fortress like base. Underneath the base was an entire subterranean section not unlike a tower itself, just pointed upside down and built into the earth, rather than up from it.
"This is Dekairie Defense." Juiliet introduced.
Shard's jaw dropped. "Damn, just one floor of that puts Leek Works to shame. Mine and yours. Is the underground section taller than the above-ground part?"
"The more accurate term would be deeper, but you're correct, it's deeper than the tower is tall." she affirmed. "But what the public plans aren't showing you is the tunneling network built out from what we'll call the Inverted Tower."
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