them—just as much as she trusted Wyatt.
But her hand fell away and Remy
stepped back from the door, not
altogether certain why she didn’t open it.
Was it because she trusted Wyatt’s
judgment over her own? Or because she
knew that any interruption would disrupt
their time together?
Moments later she heard David and
Cat move away, their voices low as they
went off down the hall. And only then
did she go to the bathroom door and
knock.
The water stopped immediately, and
before she could consider whether she
should peek in, the door cracked open.
She expected warmth and steam to come
rolling out, but there was only Wyatt.
“What happened?” He poked his face
around, his hair dripping in crazy dark
wings, his eyes sharp and alert. She
could see only a glimpse of tanned neck
and a sliver of water-dappled shoulder
before she jerked her attention away.
“David and Cat just came to the door
and knocked. I didn’t answer,” she
added before he could respond. “They
went away.”
“Good. Be out in a sec.” He shut the
door.
Oh God, I hope he doesn’t come out
in a towel. Or maybe I do.
Remy bit her
lip, looking at the closed bathroom door.
She felt flushed and warm again.
If he did, she didn’t know where
she’d look. Or what she’d do.
In an effort to distract herself, she
walked around the room, looking at his
things. The neat pile of clothing on the
other dresser. His pack on the floor,
with a variety of other things she
recognized from the semi-truck: the first
aid kit, duct tape, the box with Trojan on
it, a pair of boots. Then she wandered
over to the table next to the bed. Earlier,
she’d noticed the small rectangular item,
a hand-sized, sleek electronic device. A
cord ran from it down behind the table,
and when she picked it up, the surface lit
to show a picture. Remy’s breath caught
and she went still, something sharp and
sad twisting inside her.
The picture was of a woman and two
children, all smiling and beautiful.
Heartbreaking in their beauty.
This is why.
She nodded to herself, still looking at
the picture, seeing the bright, laughing
eyes of the red-haired girl whose face
was an explosion of freckles, the
mischievous grin on the towheaded
boy’s face—he looked like a devilish
one—and, the wide, white smile of the
woman, whose blond-brown hair curled
in a riot around her face, held back at the
top by a sparkly barrette. She had a
sweet, happy face that wouldn’t be
called striking so much as pretty or
perky. Intelligence and warmth shone in
her eyes, even in this picture.
She must have been looking at
someone she loved. And who loved her
in return.
The bathroom door opened and Remy
put the device down with a clatter.
Turning, guilt written all over her face,
she faced Wyatt.
His eyes went from her to the table
and back again, but he said nothing as he
walked over to one of the dressers and
yanked open a drawer. He was, as she’d
feared, wearing nothing but a towel.
Rivulets of water ran down over his
arms and neck, dripping from too-long
hair plastered to his skin, and she
couldn’t help but admire his long, lean
back and the slide of muscle there as he
dug through the drawer.
But the tension was different now.
Her awareness of him was tempered by
sorrow and sympathy, and the reality of
what he’d lost. A feeling of inadequacy.
And
discomfort
at
being
caught
snooping.
He disappeared into the bathroom
again, then came out moments later
wearing a T-shirt that clung to his damp
skin and a pair of loose, drawstring
shorts. He’d shaved, but his face was
still tight and drawn.
“Now that you’ve assuaged your
curiosity,” he said, his voice cool and
remote. “I suppose I owe you a little
more of an explanation.”
“You don’t owe me anything,” she
replied automatically, forcing herself to
use the same emotionless tone.
His mouth quirked without humor.
“Another bad movie line. Yet, there are
some things you should know . . . about
me, and the others. Before we meet
downstairs. In”—he glanced at his
watch—“forty-five minutes.”
“Fine.”
“Have a seat,” he said, and sat down
in a chair as far away from her as
possible.
She sat on the edge of the bed and
leveled a stare at him.
“Quent, Elliott, and I went on a
hiking and caving trip in the mountains
of Sedona, Arizona. Fence and another
guy named Lenny were our guides.
While we were in there, all hell broke
loose—there were earthquakes, storms,
all kinds of events. Something happened
and we were knocked unconscious.
When we woke up, we found Simon
there, too, and we all came out of the
cave.” He focused his gaze on her,
steady and intent. “It was fifty years
later.”
Remy blinked and tried to assimilate
his words. “Fifty or fifteen?” she said,
knowing what she’d heard, but knowing
it was impossible. Yet, his expression
was one of calm certainty.
“Fifty. A half a century.”
“So you’re telling me . . . you . . .
what . . . ?” She worked to grasp the
concept, to wrap her mind around his
words. She shook her head. Crazy.
“How?”
“We don’t know. Time-traveled,
maybe. Frozen in time, maybe. We don’t
know. All we know is, one minute it was
June of 2010, and then when we woke
up or came to, it was 2060. And the
world . . . was . . .” His voice cracked.
Gone.
She looked at him for a long moment,
and he met her eyes unflinchingly. Truth
shone there. “Really?” she said finally in
a low voice.
He nodded. “Really.”
“So . . . you’re . . . really old.” Remy
wasn’t certain why
that
was the first
thing that came out of her mouth. She
wasn’t certain if she really believed
him. But . . . hell, if there were zombies,
and immortal beings, and crystals that
could kill merely by their presence . . .
she supposed time travel wasn’t
completely out of the realm of
possibility.
Before he could respond to her silly,
thoughtless statement, she spoke again.
“I can’t imagine how terrible that must
have been. For you.” Her attention
slipped over to the bedside table and its
device with the photo, then back again.
“I’m sorry, Wyatt.”
He nodded, and she saw his throat
work as he forced himself to swallow.
“I . . . kissed my wife and children
goodbye one day and got on a plane. The
next thing I knew, it was fifty years later
. . . and they were gone.
Everything
was
gone. Every fucking thing.”
Remy felt sick. “Wyatt.” Her eyes
stung and a horrible, empty ache swept
over her. How could anyone handle that?
How could anyone be normal, sane . . .
happy . . . after that? “My God. I’m so
sorry.”
“If I hadn’t gotten on that plane . . . if
I hadn’t left them . . .”
He didn’t seem to be talking to her
any longer . . . the words tumbled out
quietly, taut with grief and guilt and
desolation. She didn’t remember getting
up, getting out of her chair. But the next
thing she knew, she was sliding her arms
around his shoulders, sliding onto his
lap, pulling him into her. Close to her.
She felt a tremor ripple over his
wide shoulders, the stiffness in his arms
and neck, the ragged breaths. His hair
pressed wet against her cheek, dripping
and seeping into the front of her shirt,
sleek and cold under her hands. But his
body melted against her, warm and
solid, and for a moment . . . just a
moment . . . she closed her eyes.
Breathed in, smelled him, felt that little
fluttering warmth in her belly.
Ah, Wyatt.
He moved, gently taking her arms
from around him, extricating himself. “I
. . . Remy, there’s more. And I can’t . . .
think . . . when you’re—when—like
this.” He kept his face averted as he
slipped away, standing to walk across
the room.
She watched him, settling into the
chair he’d vacated, waiting. Patient,
horrified and devastated.
“It’s been a year,” he said, his voice
stronger now. “Since we came out of
that cave. One of the guys—Lenny—died
shortly after. But the rest of us, the five
of us . . . we’ve changed.” He glanced at
her now, sort of sidewise, as if to gauge
her reaction. “We can do . . . things.
Each of us has an ability we didn’t have
before. Elliott isn’t just a doctor
anymore, but now he can heal with the
touch of his hands—but there’s a sort of
backlash when he does it. And he can
sort of see what’s going on inside
someone. Quent can touch something and
see its past, read its history—but he gets
sucked into a trancelike, coma sort of
state. That’s why Zoë won’t let him
touch the Mother crystal. She’s afraid
it’s too powerful and he won’t come
back out of it.”
Remy was aware that her jaw had
fallen open, and she closed it.
“Simon . . . well . . .” Wyatt gave a
strained chuckle, “I wouldn’t believe it
if I hadn’t seen it myself, but he can turn
himself invisible. That’s how we got
past Dantès, that first time we met—
when you set him to guard us. Simon
turned invisible and sneaked past him.”
She wanted to shake her head, to tell
him he was crazy . . . but Wyatt? He
might be a jerk, he might be arrogant and
commandeering and cold . . . but he
wasn’t crazy.
“Let me guess,” Remy said, somehow
finding her voice. The pieces—as
improbable as they were—had fallen
into place. “You can walk through a fire
and not burn up?”
His eyes glinted briefly with
appreciation. “Basically. I do burn . . .
but then it . . . peels away. Or at least,
that’s what happened last night. I didn’t
know it would happen. That’s the first
time . . . and I don’t really know if it
would happen again. I’m not particularly
eager to find out.”
Remy looked at him, and he stared
back for what seemed like a long time.
“You realize how crazy this all sounds,”
she finally said.
“No shit.” He ran a hand through his
hair. “There’s one more thing.” When
she didn’t respond, he continued. “David
. . . well, he’s my son.”
His son.
“Wow.” She tilted her head,
thought about that. More pieces fell into
place as she remembered the moment in
Cat’s room when Wyatt realized she was
there. That moment when he gathered her
up to him as if he’d never let her go . . .
and then the shields, falling back into
place once again. She tried to smile.
Now it all made sense. “So that makes
Cat . . . your granddaughter?”
His expression reflected the same
wonder and confusion she was feeling.
“Yes.” There was even the ghost of a
smile—the slightest bit of happy—
playing about his lips.
Remy laughed softly, shaking her
head. “Well, she’s going to be a little
disappointed to know you’re her
grandfather.”
He frowned. “What? Why?”
“I saw the way she was checking you
out. She thinks you’re hot.” Somehow,
teasing him a little felt . . . right. It eased
the tension, just enough.
“Christ,” he muttered.
Silence fell only for a moment, then a
sharp rap at the door had them both
looking up. Wyatt made a sharp gesture
to Remy, sending her toward the
bathroom, but she frowned and shook