Authors: Erica O'Rourke
“Echoes matter,” I said softly. “But not in the same way. And not to all Walkers.”
Our words made smoky puffs in the cold air. “Is that why you don't get attached? Because you can always find something similar. Or better.”
“Real is better,” I said quietly. My time with the Walkers was running out, but maybe I could forge a future with Simon in it. “It matters more.”
“Does it? This place
feels
real.”
Was Doughnut World Simon real? To me, yes. Was he enough?
I'd thought so, for a while. If I'd spent time with him over music and coffee and free-throw lessons, I might have gotten to know him beyond making out in a car. But the Simon standing in front of me was the one who'd told me about his family and asked about mine, who'd taught me how to shoot free throws and learned how
to play the piano, however poorly. This was the Simon I wanted, not because of which world he belonged to, but because of who he was.
I pointed to his house. “There. Your mom's Echo might be inside. She might be healthy. Would you rather have her, or the one back home?”
He eyed the door with a new wariness. “We have to see if she's sick.”
“I'll go in,” I said. Better not to risk an encounter between Simons. “Echoes don't notice me unless I make an effort. What should I look for?”
“Check the cabinet to the right of the sink for medication. Or the calendar by the phoneâlook for doctor's appointments.”
“Give me ten minutes,” I said.
“Can Iâcan I watch? Through the window?”
I wondered how he felt, witnessing a life that looked like his but would never be. Until now, all the people I cared about were Walkers, so I'd never had to watch their Echoes. Lonely, I thought. A different kind of loneliness than the one I'd known, but it still pinched at me.
“Of course.”
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Worlds can form or fall apart in an instant.
We turned into the driveway, the door at the side of the house opened, and Simon's Echo came out, the porch light glinting off his shaggy hair as he hefted a paper bag and took it to the recycling bin.
Behind me, my Simon froze. “That's me.”
I shoved him into the hedge separating the cottage from its neighbor and dove after him. The branches rustled around us, and I prayed Echo Simon would blame the wind, that his tendency to notice me worked only when I was in plain sight.
There was a pause, then the sound of footsteps on gravel, diminishing as he walked back to the house. I sagged in relief.
And then I heard a sharp whistle, a metallic jingle, and the delighted bark that could only be Iggy.
“Bad dog,” I muttered.
An instant later Iggy nosed through the shrubbery, and my hand was covered in enthusiastic slobber.
“You can come out now,” Echo Simon called.
Simon grabbed for my wrist, but I shook him off.
“Stay here. Do not come out, no matter what happens,” I whispered, and stepped into view, my hair snagging in the branches. “Call off your dog.”
“Tell me why you're trespassing,” Echo Simon replied. He shoved inky-black hair out of his eyes and peered at me. “You're that girl. From school.”
“I'm that girl,” I said, forcing myself not to look at the shrubbery, where Iggy was still barking.
“Iggy, come,” he said, but the dog ignored him. “Who else is back there?”
“Nobody.” I widened my eyes and gave him my best smile. “I swear.”
He smirked. “You're cute, I'll give you that. But I'll take the dog's word over yours.”
I studied him, trying to figure out who this Simon was. Rail thin, lip ring, alt-metal-band T-shirt, and a look in his eyes that suggested he had at least a few of the real Simon's memories.
He grabbed my arm and I yelped. Iggy's barks turned frantic.
“Let go of me!” I tried to yank away, but he held fast.
“Last chance,” Echo Simon called as I struggled against him. “The dog might look goofy, but he'll attack if I tell him to.”
“I doubt it,” the real Simon said, stepping onto the driveway, rubbing the top of Iggy's head. “Sit, boy.”
Echo Simon dropped my arm. The dog looked between the two of them and whined in confusion.
“Oh,
hell
,” I said, as the world cracked open.
“What the fuck is this?” said Echo Simon, staring at the Key World version of himself. “Some kind of joke?”
“It's bad,” I said, grabbing Original Simon's hand. “Very, very bad.”
Around the three of us a tear was formingânot the usual pivot but a gaping slash. Iggy turned in fretful circles, but neither boy seemed to notice it.
The dissonance pouring out of the rift was so strong I nearly dropped to my knees. “Time to go,” I said through clenched teeth.
“What about my mom?” asked Original Simon.
“Mom?” said the Echo, looking poleaxed. “What about her?”
“We have to leave,” I said, as the rip grew. Around us the world started to flicker and dim, the first stirrings of a cleaving. “Now.”
“Is she sick?” Simon asked. “Did the chemo work? Or the surgery?”
Echo Simon shook his head, eyes somber. The rusting Toyota changed to a Volkswagen and back in a blink.
They looked at each other, two versions of the boy I'd fallen for, carrying a grief so big it crossed worlds. “Simon,” I said, and they turned in unison. “My Simon. You can't be here.”
I stumbled into him, the world wavering as the breach widened.
“What's wrong with her?” asked Echo Simon.
“Frequency,” I gasped, as Original Simon slid an arm around my waist, keeping me upright. “Go back.”
“To the Depot?”
I nodded. We needed distance. The crack hadn't formed until the Simons had been in close proximity. If we could get away, it might slow down; if we left, it might reverse. Most importantly, I had to keep Simon safe.
“Take my car,” said Echo Simon.
“No!” The Toyota was cycling through different vehicles. If we were in it, we might get sent to another frequency and never find our way back. “Walk.”
Original Simon shook his head. “Run,” he said, and we took off as the world around his Echo continued to crumble.
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I was right about the proximity. The farther away we got from Echo Simon, the more stable I felt. Behind us the erratic pulse of the tear slowed and steadied, a heartbeat returning to normal. The world took on substance and color. But Simon urged me
along, not bothering to waste air or concentration on speech. When we reached the train station, I skidded to a stop, trying to hear the Key World. Simon barely looked winded. Leaning against a light post, I wheezed, “Thanks.”
“For starting . . . whatever that was?” He waved angrily in the direction of his house. “I couldn't hide. Not when he wasâI wasâhurting you.”
“You'd never hurt me, here or anywhere else. You got me out.”
I couldn't concentrate. My mind was whirling, trying to understand what had happened, trying to grab hold of the frequency I needed. Panic left me too scattered. I couldn't get us back on my own.
I dug in my bag for the necklace Monty had pressed into my hand. How had he known I'd need it tonight?
The pendant was a miniature tuning forkâthree inches long, perfectly balanced, with the worn patina of something much loved. The chain puddled in my palm as I tilted it under the light and saw the name etched into the tines.
Rosemont Armstrong.
Monty had given me my grandmother's pendant. Which meant she hadn't taken it with her when she disappeared. I couldn't think about it now, but I would. Soon.
“What's that?” Simon asked.
“The way back,” I said, and struck it on the light post. The sound rang out, soft but true, and the Key World pivot fluttered in response. I grabbed Simon's hand and brought us home.
Damage to the fabric of a world results in a weaker frequency, rendering the affected threads more prone to future vibrato fractums and other problems.
âChapter Five, “Physics,”
Principles and Practices of Cleaving, Year Five
E
ITHER PRACTICE REALLY
did make perfect, or desperation counted for more than I realized, but the return trip was easier on both of us.
Not that it was easy. My legs trembled, my lungs burned, and my head ached like a New Year's Day hangover. Simon looked betterâthe benefit of being a jock, I guess.
We sat in the Jeep with the heater on full blast. It was filled with fast-food wrappers and dog toys. I never wanted to leave.
“Hell of an introduction,” he said. “Is it usually this crazy?”
I curled up against his side, listening for any hint of damage. “Usually it's pretty calm.” Except for cleavings.
His hand moved gently over my hair, removing twigs and leaves. “Iggy recognized me.”
“My grandfather says animals are better at that kind of thing.”
He touched his lips to my forehead. “What happened back there? I couldn't see it, but it felt bad.”
I had no idea. This was uncharted territory. Thinking out loud, I said, “It wasn't a pivot. Those come from decisions. It wasn't a cleaving, because you can't stop a cleaving after it starts, and this stabilized once we left. This was like the fabric of the world couldn't handle both of your frequencies at once, so it ripped, then wove back together when we left.”
Was it possible for threads to re-form?
I checked the map, but the pivot we'd come through shone like a miniature sunâstrong and steady. “It's a freak thing. We might never know.”
Eliot would. Addie, too. Neither one of them was going to help me now. Monty, but he wasn't exactly a reliable source. I clutched my grandmother's tuning fork. Why hadn't she taken it with her on that last Walk? She could have found her way home.
I slipped the chain over my head. Monty had answers; I'd simply been asking the wrong questions.
“You can't Walk anymore,” I said. “We can't risk running into your Echo again.”
“And you can't go alone.”
“I do it all the time.”
“Not anymore,” he said, and kissed me.
“You are not the boss of me,” I said a few minutes later. “But I appreciate the concern.”
“I nearly lost you,” he said, tracing the chain of my necklace. “What ifâ”
“Everything is a what-if. That's why I love it.” I paused.
“We'll find your mom. A healthy version. It'll take time, that's all.”
Time I might not have if Addie blabbed to Lattimer.
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It was as if Monty had a secret abilityâan ability other than Walkingâthat told him to lie low when he was about to be grilled. I waited as late as I could the next morning, hoping he'd show up in the kitchen and I could ask him about my grandmother's pendant, or the strange dual-Simon tear or anything else. But my mom caught sight of me first and ordered me out the door to school, where Simon greeted me with a slow, knee-buckling kiss.
The entire corridor went silent, then filled with a hurricane of whispers.
“What was that for?” I'd wanted people to see me, but this wasn't quite what I'd had in mind.
“Everything. Nothing. For being you, mostly.”
“For helping with your mom.” My heart twisted the tiniest bit.
“For offering, sure. But thisâ” He gestured to the space I'd put between us. “This started before I told you about her. It started way before I knew what you could do.”
It had started when I went after his Echo. But my guilt kept me from saying so. “Walk me to orchestra?”
“Gladly.” Before I could stop him, he hooked his arm around my waist, casual and obvious.
We passed by the trophy case, and I looked over my repair from yesterday.
And then I stopped cold.
“What's wrong?”
“The trophies,” I said, fear gathering in my stomach like a leaden ball. “They're different.”
“What do you mean?” He let go of me. “Wait. This is a conference trophy, not State. And where's my net?”
“It must have slid back,” I said. “That's what I was fixing yesterday, when you caught me. It was another world merging with this one. You were on the JV squad, I think.”
“I'm not in the picture at all,” he said. “Is this because of last night?”
“It must be.” I thought back to the cottage. The one-car garage. “Your Echo house didn't have a basketball hoop.”
He closed his eyes, like he was trying to picture it. “No, I guess not.”
The Echo we'd met didn't look like a basketball player; piercings aside, he
moved
differently than Simon, slouching instead of striding.
“The world bled through. When I fixed the trophy inversion yesterday, the strings must have been left vulnerable, so when your frequencies met last night, the damage showed up here.” Simon looked utterly perplexed. “Part of last night's Echo has overtaken the Key World. Your doppelgänger didn't play basketball. In that reality, the basketball team had a different season last year. These are
their
trophies.”
“I remember winning,” he said. “I remember cutting down the net. Won't other people notice too?”
“I don't know. This is advanced stuff. College level.” The
pitiful little trophy didn't move, which meant the inversion had taken root. “I need to Walk through and fix it.”
“For a trophy? No way.”
“It's an inversion,” I said. “It will keep spreading until I fix it.”
“What if you don't come back?” His fingers hooked in the pockets of my jeans, drew me closer. “Don't go.”
“I'll come home,” I said, and fished the pendant out from beneath my shirt. “I'm a Walker. This is what we do.”