Back to the Future Part II (10 page)

Read Back to the Future Part II Online

Authors: Craig Shaw Gardner

BOOK: Back to the Future Part II
5.45Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

She reached her hand forward, ready to press her thumb to the middle of the plate.

‘Welcome home, Jennifer!’ the computer boomed cheerily.

Wait a moment. Should the computer be welcoming her when she was going out?

The door opened before she could put her thumb on the plate.

There was a woman standing in the doorway. A woman who looked an awful lot like her, only puffier, with more wrinkles, and dark circles under her eyes.

Jennifer realised she was looking at her older self.

'Oh, my god',’ she screamed. 'I’m old!’

After that, everything went blank.

* * *

And all three of them. Doc. Marty and Jennifer, were busy elsewhere, so none of them could see Biff take off in the DeLorean, or, a moment later, land the DeLorean in the exact same spot. He quickly got out to hobble away, too quickly, maybe, because his cane got caught as the gull-wing door swung down. The cane snapped in two as Biff struggled with it. He took the half he had freed and hobbled away, leaving everything like it was before - except that now Biff no longer clutched the silver bag.

Chapter Nine

It was every bit as bad as Doc Brown thought it would be. A second after the two Jennifers spotted each other, both of them had fainted dead away.

There was a little luck involved, though. Both of them had also fallen forward - the 2015 Jennifer into the house, and the 1985 version out onto the front steps. And Doc had been there to catch her, and pull her all the way outside so that the door would close behind her. That part was neat, if Doc thought so himself. Now all he had to do was maneouvre the unconscious Jennifer back to the car, and they could get out of here!

As he steered the dead weight in his arms down the steps, he could hear Marty Senior’s voice through the door:

‘Looks like your mother's tranked again!’

Doc sighed. Well, maybe Marty Senior and Jennifer didn’t have the happiest life in 2015, but there was nothing Doc Brown could do about it. He didn’t dare tamper anymore with their lives, in the past or the future! This fiasco with Jennifer had convinced him just how dangerous time travelling could be!

Doc stopped to catch his breath. Jennifer weighed down Doc’s arms until they were almost numb, and he had barely managed to drag her twenty feet! Doc 
never realised
 
how heavy
 
an
 
unconscious seventeen-year-old girl could be. He saw his young
 sidekick running up the walk, and decided he could use some help.

‘Marty!’ he called. ‘Come quick!’

Marty looked terribly afraid as he ran up to the two of them.

‘Is she alive?’ he whispered as he looked down at Jennifer.

‘She’s in shock,’ Doc answered hurriedly, ’as I predicted, but otherwise she seems unhurt. Let's get her back to 1985, and then I’m going to destroy the time machine.’

Marty 
looked up at Doc,
 the fear turned to surprise. ‘Destroy it? But what about all that stuff about humanity, finding out where we’re going, and why?’ Doc shook his head firmly. It had been a tough decision, but he wouldn’t go back on it now.

'The risks are just too great - as this incident proves,’ he pointed out. ‘And I was behaving responsibly! Just imagine the danger if the time machine were to fall into the wrong hands!'

That was funny. Doc could have sworn he heard that triple sonic boom - the same kind of boom that resulted from using the time machine. Oh, well. There were a 
lot of things
 in 2015 capable of making that kind 
of
 noise. 
He shifted
 some of 
Jennifer's weight
 into Marty’s arms.

‘My only regret,' Doc added, almost as an after-
thought,
 ‘is 
that I'll never get a chance
 to visit my 
favourite historical era - the Old West. But time
 
travelling is
 
just too dangerous. Better I devote myself to
 studying 
the other great mystery
 
of
 
the Universe -
women.’

Marty shook his head.

Doc. if you can solve that one, let me know.’ Jennifer between them, they 
walked back to the
 DeLorean.

Marty climbed into the passenger seat, and he and Doc managed to lower Jennifer onto Marty’s lap. Einstein jumped into the back as Doc got behind the wheel. The scientist quickly entered their destination data. They were going home - to 1985!

‘We’ll come back after dark,’ Doc explained, setting their arrival for the middle of the night. ‘The less we’re seen, the better.’

Doc turned around. The dog was playing with something in the back seat.

‘Einie, get that junk out of your mouth!'

Doc pulled the crumpled silver bag from between Einstein's teeth.

A silver bag? Something tugged at the back of Doc’s mind. Where had he seen a silver bag before? Where did that dog find this stuff, anyway?

Doc started the time machine. It was time to go back where they belonged, where they could stop worrying and just let time take care of itself.

Marty kept a firm grip on the unconscious Jennifer.

He wanted to keep anything more from happening to her on the way home.

‘Altitude, seven thousand feet,’ Doc announced. That should be high enough.’ He glanced around to check on his passengers. ‘Marty. Einie. brace your-selves for temporal displacement!'

Doc floored the accelerator, straight for a row of floating lane markers.

They reached eighty-eight miles per hour in a matter of seconds.

There was a blinding flash of light from the flux capacitor, accompanied by that moment when you seemed to go from travelling at eighty-eight miles per hour, to not travelling at all - as if, for an instant, you were suspended outside of time and space. Then there were the three sonic booms, and you were back going eighty-eight miles per hour again - except you were sometime else.

Marty looked out the window. Wherever they were, the floating lane markers were gone. It was night, and all he could see were tiny lights far below. ‘Did we make it?’ Marty asked.

As if in answer, a 747 jumbo jet roared much too close overhead. The DeLorean shook violently for a moment before Doc stabilised it again.

‘We’re back,’ Doc agreed. ‘Now let's get Jennifer home.

He took the DeLorean down slowly, searching the lights below for familiar streets.

A moment later, he set the car down on a quiet road outside of town as the wheels slipped back into place underneath.

They drove the rest of the way to Jennifer's house.

Even in the dark, Marty could see
THE PARKERS
 in big block Ietters on the mailbox.

Marty and Doc managed to get Jennifer out of the car, and gently carried her toward the house. Doc nodded ahead to the front porch.

‘Let's put her in the swing.'

Wouldn't that just confuse Jennifer more when she woke up?

'But she left from my house,' Marty pointed out.

Doc thought about that for a second.

'True,' he replied reasonably, 'but when she revives here at her own house, and it’s dark, the disorientation will help convince her that it was all a dream.’

Hmm, Marty thought. That sounded logical enough.

‘Okay,’ Marty agreed, ‘you’re the Doc.'

They set her down on the porch swing. Jennifer began to snore softly. Marty guessed everything was going to be all right. But why did he still feel uneasy? May be it had something to do with the time travelling - sort of like jet lag.

Still, there was something different - he turned away from Jennifer, ready to follow Doc back down to the car - but stopped when he saw the heavy iron grillwork that covered the windows to either side of the front door.

‘I must be crazy,' he muttered, half to himself. 'I don't remember bars on these windows.’ Maybe, he thought, that time-lag business played tricks with your memory, too.

‘Oh well, I guess -’ He had to get himself back together. He paused to take a deep breath, but stopped almost as soon as he started to inhale.

‘Jeez, something really stinks!' He barely kept himself from coughing. It was really foul!

Doc sniffed the air and made a face of his own. ‘Must be a fire somewhere. We'd better get going.’

Marty glanced over his shoulder at the sleeping Jennifer.

Doc reassured Marty as they hurried back to the car.

‘She'll be fine. I’ll take you home, you can change clothes and come back for her in your truck.’

Marty guessed that made sense, too. He shrugged and followed the older man.

‘You're the Doc.’

They got back in the DeLorean and headed for Marty’s home, over in the Lyon Estates.

Marty still couldn’t shake the feeling that things weren’t quite right. It probably had something to do with coming back here from the future - a future he realised he didn't know too much about.

May be that’s what was bothering him - getting a glimpse of the future, but not his future - his or his family’s. Heaven knew it looked different to him now , around here - back in 1985, in what should be familiar surroundings. He noticed a boarded-up window |here and there as they drove through the late-night | streets, and there seemed to be twice as much trash everywhere as he had ever seen before. Even the road was awful - didn't Hill Valley ever fill in their pot holes?

But the more he thought about it, the more he guessed time travel had something to do with all of this, not only this trip to the future, but his earlier visit to the past. He was probably ‘gaining a sense of perspective' - that was the sort of 
thing
 his parents would say - and seeing things about Hill Valley he never would have noticed before.

Or maybe he was just tired and grumpy from all that action in the future.

Doc pulled the DeLorean past the lion gates and into Marty’s neighbourhood. They stopped in front of Marty’s house. Marty jumped out and waved goodnight.

‘If you need me,’ Doc called out, patting the steering wheel, ‘I’ll be back at my lab, dismantling this thing. Let me know if you have any trouble convincing her it was all a dream.’

‘Or a nightmare,’ Marty added as he started up the walk.

Doc nodded sagely, then drove away.

Marty stopped, half-way up to the house.

He heard a couple of sounds in the distance, explosions, really, like a car backfiring over and over again. It almost Bounded like gunfire.

In Hill Valley? Get serious, McFlyl 

Marty hurried to the front door anyway. He stuck his key in the lock. It wouldn’t turn. Marty jiggled the key. It still didn’t work.

‘What the hell?’ Marty whispered.

Somebody had changed the lock. But why? He supposed it must have something to do with the stuff he had done back in 1955, and the changes that stuff had caused - like his father becoming a successful writer and all - here in 1085. But, if that was true, shouldn’t Marty’s key have changed to fit the new lock? That’s the way he thought this time travel stuff worked. He guessed he still really didn’t understand Doc’s explanations after all.

Oh, well. It was too late to try and figure out the mysteries of science. If he couldn't get in the front door, he'd go around the back way. He would have another chance to figure out everything in the morning.

The gate leading into the back yard was locked too, with an impressive looking padlock. It wasn’t going to be as easy to get to sleep as Marty had once thought. But there was more than one way to get into his bedroom.

He climbed on top of a garbage can, then jumped over the gate. There! That wasn’t so hard. He walked a few more paces until he was opposite his bedroom, and tried one of the windows. It opened easily. That was a relief! Marty had started to think there might be something wrong here.

He climbed quickly inside, easing his foot down so that it would hit the top of his dresser.

Wait a minute! The dresser wasn't there!

Marty lost his balance and fell into the room. Onto a bed.

Somebody screamed in his ear.

Chapter Ten

The light went on. A young black girl, maybe eleven or twelve, stared at him from less than a foot away, clutching her covers up to her neck.

'Momma!’ she shrieked. ‘Dad! Help!’

‘Hey,’ Marty demanded, ‘who are you? What are you’ - he hesitated, looking around - ‘doing - in my - room?’

This place had changed. His model airplanes, mini-amplifier, and posters of sports stars were gone, replaced by pink wallpaper, stuffed animals, and posters of Michael Jackson.

Marty didn’t recognise this place at all. This wasn’t his room.

This was a girl’s room.

‘Help! Daddy! Help!’ the room's rightful owner screamed as she jumped from bed. She grabbed a handful of things from her bureau and started to throw them at Marty.

Marty ducked. This should have been his room. Where had he gone wrong?

The door slammed open, and the rest of the family in fathar. mother and younger brother. All three stared at Marty.

Marty was not pleased to see that the father was carrying a baseball bat.

‘Freeze,
 sucker!’ the father announced as he raised the bat above his head.

Marty raised his hands.

OK, take it easy,’he said slowly and clearly. ‘I don't want any trouble.'

That didn't seem to impress the father at all. He raised his bat even higher.

‘Well, you got trouble now. you no-good trash! What are you doing in here with my daughter?’

Marty looked around the room, as if an explanation might be hiding somewhere.

'Nothing!' he insisted hastily. ‘It's all a mistake! I'm in the wrong house!'

The younger brother jumped up and down. He was really getting into this.

‘Whoop him. Dad!’ he yelled happily. ‘He's lying!'

‘Shut up, Harold,’ his father told him. He looked past Marty at his daughter. ‘Loretta, did he touch you?’

The girl nodded her head vigorously.

‘He jumped on me!’

He did not, Marty thought! He more like - fell on her. But how could he explain that?

The father took another step into the room.

Other books

Fresh Off the Boat by Eddie Huang
Hearts in Cups by Candace Gylgayton
Spellbound by Blake Charlton
The Lost City of Faar by D.J. MacHale
Demo by Alison Miller
The Opposite of Love by Sarah Lynn Scheerger
The Gates Of Troy by Glyn Iliffe
Game of Temptation by Santoso, Anda J.
Red Queen by Victoria Aveyard