Read The Long Wait for Tomorrow Online

Authors: Joaquin Dorfman

The Long Wait for Tomorrow (20 page)

BOOK: The Long Wait for Tomorrow
10.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Kelly rose from his seat, nose to nose with Patrick.

“Tell me what happened to Edmund.”

elly and Patrick parked outside, looking up at the gray two-story house.

The clock read 3:15.

“This the right address?” Kelly asked, looking out the window.

“Yeah, this is it.”

The two of them sat for a while, waiting.

Outside, trees lining the sidewalks of Unity Park sheltered them with a forgiving blanket of shade.

“What if he’s got some kind of after-school thing?” Patrick asked.

“I don’t think he does.”

“The game starts at eight.”

“Fuck the game …”

“I know it’s hard trying to”—Patrick had to fight how ludicrous it sounded—“to live in the present, be this person you’re not. Anymore. But we still don’t know what any of this means. We don’t know why this is happening. Do we even know why we’re
here
?”

“Because something bad is going to happen,” Kelly said grimly. “And Edmund’s the key.”

“Oh, and you know this
how
?”

“I don’t
know
anything.”

“Yeah, you and I should start a club.”

“And the rest of the world can join.” Kelly sighed as he glanced out the window, over to Edmund’s house. “Tell me, Patrick … How often do you hear of a tragedy
anyone
saw coming?”

Patrick didn’t answer, innately aware of where this was going. Silent with misgivings and still unable to come to terms with a Kelly McDermott who would even touch upon such an issue.

“It’s always after the fact, isn’t it?” Kelly turned back to Patrick. “Nobody sees it coming, but after the fact, oh sure; should’ve seen it coming. I know we can’t predict the future. And I know I can’t
remember
it, I know that I don’t
know.
But I can
feel
it.”

Patrick briefly thought of all the prophets throughout history.

It wasn’t about knowing, it never had been.

“And even you have to admit, Patrick, the writing is on the wall,” Kelly said. “How surprised would you be—honestly surprised, if something horrible happened to Edmund. The boy’s carrying around a world of hurt, he’s unhinged, maybe desperate—”

As Kelly spoke, Patrick thought back to that day out on the field. Edmund had switched from hysterical tears to single-minded fury in the span of a few simple heartbeats. Bound against the flagpole, cords in his neck bulging, swearing his revenge.

I’ll kill you all.

“Wait, what are you saying?” Patrick interrupted. “You’re saying Eddie’s a psychopath?”

Patrick was unprepared for Kelly’s palm, hardly even saw it. It smacked against his arm with enough force to throw him back against the passenger door. His head bounced off the window with the hollow sound of knuckles against an empty bottle.

“Don’t call him that,” Kelly snapped, furious. He grabbed hold of Patrick’s arm, dug in tight. “He’s not a psychopath. Edmund is a depressed, lonely boy. He’s barely hanging on, and now he’s being blackmailed with a potentially humiliating photograph in the possession of someone who I consider to be, if I may be so bold, an
actual
psychopath.”

Patrick could feel himself beginning to bruise under Kelly’s angry grip. “Kelly—”

“I don’t
know
if something bad is going to happen to Edmund, but I
should. Both
of us should. Because we
helped
do this to him.”

Kelly released Patrick from his grip and sunk back into his seat, scowling at the odometer.

Patrick slowly reached up and rubbed his arm, in shock.

“This could all mean nothing,” Kelly said, voice flat. “And maybe it’s all windmills in my mind. But even if I
am
jumping at shadows … It doesn’t mean we don’t owe him … If we can help Edmund, fix this mess we’ve made. What we did to that poor kid …”

Kelly trailed off, and at the sight of his unapologetic lament,
Patrick was instantly contaminated by it. Channeling the vile self-loathing like a lightning rod. His arm throbbed, as though everything that Kelly felt had been mainlined into him, a near overdose that forced him to look away. An elderly couple shuffled past the car, trying to make out Patrick’s face.

“Are you disappointed in me?” Patrick asked. “That I could do something like that to another person?”

“Surprised, I guess … I was just so positive you were the good one.”

Patrick almost choked on Kelly’s words.

“It’s all right.” Kelly put an arm around Patrick’s shoulder. Looked him right in the eye, a steely commitment rendered in bright blue. “It’s all right if you don’t believe me. You don’t have to for us to make this right. And we are. We’re going to fix this.”

“Right now, looks like.” Patrick motioned past Kelly.

Edmund was walking up to his house. Shoulders slumped beneath a blue book bag, eyes fixed on the concrete. Out of his pocket came a set of keys. He paused before the limestone steps leading up to the porch, a rumpled figurine in the shadow of an unwelcoming dollhouse.

“Think he’s going to listen to us?” Patrick asked.

Kelly’s only response was to open the door.

The two of them made their way across the street, silently, like a couple of G-men. Unable to shake off damp images of Edmund’s pleading eyes, they held off for as long as they could. It wasn’t until they’d made it to the walkway that Kelly finally spoke.

“Please don’t run, Edmund.”

And to Patrick’s surprise, he didn’t.

From the top of the steps, Edmund turned around and faced them. Unafraid. He disengaged his book bag and let it slide down his arm. Wrapped one of the straps around his hand and made a fist.

That’s a weapon you’re looking at
, Patrick’s angels warned.
You know where he lives now.

As if to respect this declaration of war, Kelly stepped forward with his arms outstretched.

Palms open.

Patrick remained as he was.

“I know what I did now,” Kelly said. “Patrick told me.”

Edmund stood his ground.

“I don’t know why I would do something like that,” Kelly continued. “I wish I could say it’s all in the past, but here we are. You don’t have to accept my apology. You don’t have to accept either of our apologies right now. But, right now, I
do
need you to listen to me. And I need you to believe me.”

When Edmund spoke, it was nothing short of a dare. “Why should I?”

“Because I can help you,” Kelly told him. His conciliatory tone shifted to that of negotiation. “If you want to make this mercantile, that’s good enough for me. You don’t believe I’m sorry, then you’d better believe I can get you out of this…. Long as you’re willing to help me.”

“So, I saw you and Cody fighting today,” Edmund in formed him.

“I thought you seemed a bit more comfortable with me than you did this afternoon.”

“I’ve got two bricks in my book bag….” His face compressed with a trembling, now very familiar rage. “That’s why I feel more comfortable talking to you.”

“You do what you have to do.”

“I’m really sick of you assholes….” The profanity faltered somewhat, as though Edmund were experimenting with it for the first time, though his fury was no less succinct. “I wish you’d
killed
Cody today.”

“Help me out, and neither one of us will have to, Edmund.”

Edmund relented a little, his grip around the strap loosening. “What do you need?”

“It’s complicated.”

“You’ve got three seconds.”

“I’m from the future,” Kelly said plainly. “Twenty years in the future, and I need you to tell me how the hell that’s even possible.”

Perhaps the statement was too outrageous to warrant a reaction. In the seconds that followed, that certainly seemed the case. Not a peep from Edmund. Not even a whisper of an emotion on his face. Even the birds had ceased their tea time gossip to swallow what Kelly had just announced.

Without so much as the bat of an eyelash, Edmund turned around.

Walked across the porch and unlocked the front door.

Unaware he’d even been holding his breath, Patrick let it out, heart sinking.

“Well?” Edmund walked back to the edge of the porch. He slung his bag over his shoulder, looked down on them with a superior impatience. “You guys coming or not?”

The birds went back to their business, and Edmund motioned for them to follow.

Just as Kelly was wrapping up his story, Edmund’s mother came in with a tray of brownies and lemonade.

“Is this OK for you?” She stood at the entrance to Edmund’s room, shoulders practically filling the entire width of the doorway. Not that she was excessively fat, just thick. An opera singer’s body, dressed in hospital scrubs, name tag reading
Rachel-Ann.
Blond hair pulled back, accentuating the spherical dimensions of her face. A set of plucked eyebrows rested high on her forehead, large doe eyes sparkling with the desire to please. Her lips were moist with red lipstick, parted in a hopeful, servicing smile. “Eddie doesn’t get much company.”

“Mom.” Edmund’s voice dropped low. His cheeks went red, jaw contorting as he twisted in his chair, knees banging uncomfortably against the side of his wide antique desk.
“Please …”

Rachel-Ann paused in the middle of the room, genuinely confused by her son’s sudden desperation. “What’s wrong, Eddie?”

Patrick saw Edmund’s expression turn from embarrassed to plain miserable, words caught in his throat. It appeared as though Edmund never got
any
company, to the point where his mother had no idea how to behave in front of teenagers,
and Edmund had no way of explaining just how awful things were already going.

“Looks good,” Kelly piped up from his seat on the brown carpeted floor. He flashed a broad smile. “Brownies and lemonade are the only thing I eat some days.”

“Oh, aren’t you sweet?” she cooed, Georgia accent thickening. She moved toward Edmund, who quickly removed a series of papers from his desk to make room for the tray. There must have been an entire pan’s worth of brownies there, though it didn’t stop her from letting them know: “If y’all want any more, just go ahead and ask…. I’m Rachel-Ann, by the way.”

Edmund ushered her to the door. Rachel-Ann was attempting to compliment Patrick’s suit when Edmund managed to get his mother over the threshold and gently close the door on her.

He leaned against the wall, waiting for someone to make fun.

“Well?” Kelly asked.

“She’s just trying to be nice,” Edmund said defensively.

Patrick, half-stretched out on the bed, decided against smiling.

“I wasn’t talking about your mother,” Kelly assured. “I was talking about time travel.”

“Right, OK …” Edmund moved back to his chair, keeping a suspicious eye on Kelly all the while. He sat and swiveled to face them, holding on to the armrests as though preparing for takeoff. “Time travel … This raises a couple of questions.”

“Actually, I have one first,” Kelly said, raising his hand.

Edmund nodded, still monitoring every move they made.

“Are you just going to let everything I told you slide? I kind of figured this was going to end before it even got started, but you’re really going to accept it all? Just like that?”

For a moment, Edmund’s face sagged with a recognizable dread. As though, at any moment, the closet door would open to reveal the entire football team, clutching their sides with uncontrollable, vicious laughter.

Patrick was already preparing for Edmund to go for that bag of bricks.

“I don’t have to believe you,” Edmund concluded. His fear was gone for the moment, replaced with a superior hostility. “Whether you’re completely insane or not doesn’t interest me. Very little about you interests me. I’m out for myself here, and if you want to know about time travel, I’ll tell you everything I know…. Which, I might add, is considerable.”

“So is it even
possible
for a person to travel back in time?” Patrick asked, eager as Edmund to get the ball rolling, get it all over with.

“No,” Edmund replied.

Well, that was easy enough
, Patrick’s angels said, smirking.

“OK, then.” Kelly looked at his watch. “So, same time, next week?”

BOOK: The Long Wait for Tomorrow
10.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Australian by Diana Palmer
Medieval Master Warlords by Kathryn le Veque
Tallie's Knight by Anne Gracie
Resurrecting Pompeii by Lazer, Estelle
Dante Alighieri by Paget Toynbee
The Pretender by David Belbin
Classified Material by Ally Carter
Talk by Michael A Smerconish
The Ghost of Grania O'Malley by Michael Morpurgo