After Eden (13 page)

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Authors: Helen Douglas

BOOK: After Eden
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“Okay,” he said quietly. “Shall I drive you to school in the morning?”

“No, I’ll take the bus.”

“Oh. So, I’ll see you at school then?” He sounded cautious, concerned that he might say the wrong thing. I was glad. I wanted him to suffer a little bit, to wonder if he’d misjudged his relationship with me.

I ended the call without saying good-bye.

Chapter Eleven

The air was still and filled with mist and drizzle. As I reached the cove, the thick vapor thinned for a moment, revealing a woman throwing a stick for her dog and a boy perched on a rock, sketching. The boy turned toward me and smiled. Ryan.

I hadn’t seen him for days. He’d offered me a lift home after the French exam on Wednesday, but I’d made up a lame excuse about needing to meet Miranda in town. He’d called me several times on Thursday morning, but I let the calls go to voice mail. He didn’t try again. I’d heard from Connor that he’d spent Thursday afternoon at the arcade with Connor and Matt. Connor hadn’t mentioned Chloe by name, but the glee in his voice and talk of “some girls from school” allowed me to fill in the blanks.

The mist thickened and he disappeared again. Sketching seemed a strange occupation for someone sent back from the future. Didn’t he have more important things to do?

For a few seconds I considered ignoring him and continuing on my run, but as usual, my desire to be near him outweighed my desire to forget him. Wishing that I was in the outfit I’d worn to Connor’s on Tuesday, instead of my
ratty running clothes, I strolled across the pebbles and sand to Ryan’s rock.

“Hi, Eden,” he said, snapping his sketchbook shut and dropping it on the sand. “Are you okay?”

“I’m great.”

“You haven’t taken any of my calls. I was beginning to think you were avoiding me.”

“I
was
avoiding you.”

Ryan gazed out toward the sea. “Oh.”

I sat down on a flat rock next to him. “What are you drawing?”

“Nothing much. I like to sketch when I need time to think. It helps me relax.”

“Are you going to Plymouth tomorrow?”

Ryan nodded. “I was planning to. Connor invited me. He said you wanted me to come. But now I’m not so sure.”

“Will Chloe be coming?”

He looked at me, a mystified expression on his face. “Chloe Mason? To Plymouth?”

I just nodded, not trusting myself to speak.

“Why would she be coming with us?”

“The two of you seem pretty friendly now.” I couldn’t keep the sulk out of my voice.

“Is that why you ignored my calls? Are you jealous of Chloe?”

He sounded more surprised than amused.

“Not jealous,” I said. “It just helped me complete the puzzle.”

“What puzzle?”

“You.”

He raised an eyebrow.

“Look, when I saw you and Chloe fooling around together at the arcade, all the pieces fell into place. You don’t travel through time to make friends with people. I get that. You’re here to complete your mission and your mission is to prevent Connor from discovering a planet.”

“Yes.” Ryan nodded.

“So your friendship with me is a means to an end. I understand.”

“No.”

He left the comment hanging in the air.

“What is this anyway?” I asked, snatching his sketch pad from the sand.

“It’s just my art project,” he said, reaching for the book. “It’s not interesting.”

I flipped to the first page. It was the sketch he’d made of me during our first art lesson together. I turned the page. Studies of leaves and trunks from our trip to the Eden Project. I continued to flick through the book. A sketch of me at the beach. Me lying back on the sand, my eyes closed. Another one of me, this time sitting on my bed, surrounded by books. My face in a half-smile. A full-length sketch of me standing by the school gate. Another sketch of me soaked through with rain. A close-up of my eyes, rain beading on my eyelashes, my mascara smudged below my eyes. A sketch of me sitting on Ryan’s bed, dressed in Cassie’s clothes.

“Why have you drawn so many pictures of me?”

Ryan kicked the jagged rock in front of him. “I think about you a lot.”

“Why? Am I significant?”

Ryan laughed. “To my mission? That’s what you mean, right?”

I nodded.

“No. You’re not remotely significant. I didn’t even know you existed other than as the girl who broke Connor’s heart.”

“So why do you have all these pictures?”

“Isn’t it obvious?”

I shrugged. It wasn’t obvious at all. I knew that he liked me. And he’d been flirting with me for weeks. But he’d made it clear that he wasn’t looking for anything more.

“I can’t allow myself to develop feelings for you,” he said softly. “I leave for my own time on the twenty-third of June.”

“The day of the ball?”

“That night. After the mission completes.”

I swallowed, but a hard lump had lodged in my throat. “Are you any farther with finding out what Connor’s plans are for that night?”

Ryan smiled. “I don’t suppose you’d consider going to the ball with him, would you? Then at least I would know where he is that night.”

I groaned. “I just don’t want him to get the wrong idea.”

Ryan punched my arm lightly. “It’s a small sacrifice, Eden. One night of wondering if Connor’s going to try and kiss you versus the death of the planet.”

“When you put it like that, I don’t really have a choice. You’ll be there that night?”

“Of course.”

“Who are you going to take?”

He shrugged. “I’d like to take you.”

I felt a surge of hope.

“But you’ll be busy with Connor.”

I watched a trawler make its way across the horizon. “Just promise me one thing.”

“Anything you like.”

“Don’t take Chloe.”

Travis drove me to the railway station on Saturday.

“Who are you all dressed up for?” he asked, as we pulled into the station parking lot.

I shook my head, embarrassed. “I’m not dressed up.”

Travis smirked. “Eden, in the few months I’ve known you, you’ve lived in jeans and hoodies. Now you’re in a very short skirt and—if I’m not mistaken—you’re wearing makeup. So who’s it for? Ryan or Connor?”

“It’s none of your business.”

I glanced at the platform. The others were already there, laughing and chatting. Ryan was wearing his usual T-shirt, jeans, and boots combo, but no jacket. He had a green canvas bag, the sort you see in army surplus stores, slung over his body. He was standing next to Connor, peering at something in a magazine.

“Thanks for the lift,” I said, slamming the door without looking back.

By the time I had bought my ticket, the train was gliding
into the station. We scrambled aboard and jostled through the cars until we found two tables for four.

Connor looked at my short skirt and winked at me. “Jeans in the wash?”

“Happy birthday, Connor,” I said, passing his card and present across the table. I had bought him a couple of books he’d mentioned the week before. “You’ll have to carry them around Plymouth, but I wanted you to have them today.”

“Not a problem,” he said, pointing to his large red backpack.

Megan gave him a T-shirt with a logo that I didn’t recognize.

“How did you know I love that film?” asked Connor.

Megan threw back her head and laughed. “I found it on a website called T-shirts for Nerds. I immediately thought of you.”

The others promised to find something in Plymouth.

“What did you get from your mum?” I asked.

Connor flashed me a thick wad of twenty-pound notes. “Cash to spend as I wish.”

“What you gonna buy?” asked Matt. “An Xbox?”

“A telescope,” he said.

Ryan and I looked at each other.

“But you don’t have any kind of games console,” said Matt.

Connor smiled. “That’s why I spend so much time at yours.”

As the train made its way along its route, we all settled
into various distractions. Amy and Matt both plugged into an iPod, an earpiece each. Megan had a celebrity magazine. Connor took out a printout about telescopes and binoculars and started talking to Ryan about the one he planned to buy.

“It’s going to be heavy,” Ryan said. “Why don’t you just order it online and have it delivered?”

“I don’t want to wait. I’ve got the money today and I want the telescope today. If I order it online, it might be next weekend before I get it, and there’ll be the shipping cost. And Mr. Chinn recommended this shop called Stellar Optics. The guy who owns the shop is a friend of his. He’ll give me a ten percent discount if I show him my school astronomy club card.”

This was it. I thought back to the photo of the telescope in
The Journey to Eden
. By the end of the day, Connor would have that telescope. And on the twenty-third of June he would probably use it to discover Eden. It felt like Fate was winning after all. What if Ryan’s mission really was just part of a bigger unstoppable scheme?

The gentle rocking of the train combined with the sun shining through the window made me feel sleepy. It wasn’t until we’d just pulled out of St. Austell that I had an idea.

“So, Connor,” I said, trying to sound enthusiastic. “What’s the name of this telescope?”

He pushed the printout across the table and pointed at a photograph. “That’s the one,” he said. “It’s big enough to see the planets in some detail but not so big that it’ll be too heavy to carry around and set up. And it’s just within my budget.”

“What will you be able to see?” I asked.

“Saturn’s rings should be clear,” he said. “And the red spot on Jupiter.”

“Will we be able to see the rings around Uranus?” said Matt, sniggering.

Connor ignored him and carried on talking about binary stars and nebulae and other objects that meant little to me, and I nodded and smiled and committed the make and model of the telescope to memory.

“It sounds amazing,” I said, pushing the printout back across the table to Connor.

Ryan caught my eye and frowned.

“Right,” I said. “Drinks are on me. What’s everybody having?”

“Coffee,” said Amy and Matt at the same time.

“I’ll have a cappuccino with cinnamon and chocolate,” said Megan.

I rolled my eyes. “Not on this train, you won’t. You’ll have coffee, tea, or a soft drink.”

Megan groaned. “I’ll have a Coke then. And a Kit Kat.”

“Me too,” said Connor.

“Megan, do you have a pen and paper so I can make a list?”

Megan laughed. “It’s a pretty simple order, Eden. Two coffees, two Cokes, and two Kit Kats.”

“I know. I think my short-term memory is full. Too much studying.”

She passed me a piece of paper and a pen and I scribbled down the make and model of Connor’s telescope.

“Ryan, can you help me carry the drinks?”

We both got out of our seats and swayed our way along the car to the doors. I stopped in the space between the cars.

“You look nice today,” Ryan said. He smirked. “And I love it when you blush.”

“How much money do you have?” I asked.

“Enough to buy the drinks.”

“Do you have a credit card or anything?”

Ryan pressed a button and the door to the toilet slid open. “Inside,” he said.

We both walked inside and Ryan hit the lock button. He pulled a black wallet out of his back pocket and flicked it open. “I have dozens of cards,” he said. “We were given one for every bank in the UK. My credit limit is huge by your standards.”

“What do you mean, by my standards?”

He shook his head. “Not yours personally. Huge for this time. But that’s irrelevant. How much money do you want?”

“Enough to buy out the entire stock of telescopes in Connor’s price range.”

Slowly, as my plan dawned on him, a grin appeared on Ryan’s face. “I think I can handle that,” he said.

“Does your phone have a Web browser?” I asked. My phone was a basic, cheap model that did nothing more than call, text, and take photos.

He nodded.

“Find the phone number for Stellar Optics in Plymouth. Then we’ll call and you can buy up all the telescopes
Connor wanted. I have the make and model here on this piece of paper.”

By the time we emerged from the train toilet, ten minutes later, Ryan had called the shop and bought all five of the telescopes in stock that Connor wanted. Then, just to make sure, he had bought all the telescopes in the next price bracket, as well as the model just below, and arranged for them to be shipped to his house in Penpol Cove.

“That was brilliant,” Ryan said, laughing as the door slid open.

Outside, a woman with a toddler glared at us. “Kids these days,” she muttered.

Ryan looked bemused. “She didn’t think we were making out in a toilet, did she? Ugh!”

“That or doing drugs,” I said. “Come on, let’s get the drinks.”

Shopping had never been a favorite pastime of mine, but that Saturday in Plymouth was the worst. By the time I arrived at the Monsoon Palace late that afternoon, I was exhausted. Everyone else was there before me. They were sitting at a table by the window.

Tea lights in tiny red vases flickered on the table, which was already covered with plates of papadums, dishes of chutney, and bottles of beer. Connor swigged from a bottle just as one of the waiters showed me to the table.

“You’re late!” Connor said, a little too loudly.

“Sorry. I got caught up in the bookshop,” I said.

I’d gone to the bookshop to get away from Amy and Megan. Dress shopping had been horrible. It wasn’t the dresses themselves or the fact that it took Amy nearly three hours to choose one. It was Megan.

First, she’d refused to buy a dress because she didn’t want to waste money on one if she didn’t have a date. Then she’d confessed that the person she really wanted to go with was Connor. Finally, she decided she was going to ask him and wanted all sorts of advice from me. Did he prefer long dresses or short? Hair up or down? What was his favorite color?

“I didn’t want to say before,” she’d told me. “Not when there was a chance that you might go with him.”

I couldn’t tell her. She was smiling and trying on dresses and Amy was encouraging her. And all the time I knew that I’d promised Ryan I would go with Connor.

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