Read Jumper: Griffin's Story Online
Authors: Steven Gould
Tags: #Science Fiction, #General, #Adventure, #Fiction, #Media Tie-In, #Suspense Fiction, #Teleportation
E.V. glanced at me then said, "My brother. We'll catch him after lunch, okay?"
"Okay," Mrs. Kelson said. "He's going back on the four–seventeen so make sure you get back in time."
"Right," said E.V.
She grabbed her coat–the large black one she'd worn in
"Walking?" I asked.
"Yeah, it's close. Over on
Her face had dropped as if I'd struck her and I hurried to reassure her. "Sorry–hurt my back. It's the left side. I'd love for you to hold my other arm, though."
He relief was palpable. "I thought you were moving a little stiffly."
"Yeah."
It took ten minutes to walk to Laveta's, where we got coffee to go. Behind the coffee shop a cemetery stretched between
"Maybe if you let me share your coat."
She grinned. "I like the way you think."
She showed me a bench in the back corner of the graveyard. "Here. I come here to sketch." She opened her coat wide on the bench and invited me to sit on it. When I did, she wrapped it around us both.
"Huh," she said.
I barely dared breath. "What?"
"We both fit in here just fine. I thought
you
were
larger.
You take up more space in my mind."
"Sorry. Always been short for my
–
"
She kissed me.
I closed my eyes and leaned into it.
After a moment she drew back and I said, "You could've just said shut up."
"Are you complaining? I mean–"
This time I stopped her mouth with a kiss.
Oh. My.
Hands were roaming, mine, hers, hers guiding mine. I ached and not in the bad way of the last two weeks. Her hand, roaming up under my shirt, found the cut and I nearly yelled in her ear.
"I'm sorry. They took out the stitches yesterday and it's still, uh, tender."
"Stitches? What happened?"
We'd ended up apart. She turned me around and lifted the edge of my jacket and shirt, previously tucked in, now out. "Jesus Christ! What happened?"
My mouth worked but nothing came out.
"
"Well, yeah," I said.
"Why? That's from a knife, right?"
"Yeah, it is." Then, in a rush, "He was aiming for my kidney." I stood up and let the jacket and shirt drop back down. "Cold."
She pulled her coat closed.
"Who did that?"
"I lied to your parents."
She looked confused. "What? Can't you answer a straight question? What do you mean, you lied to my parents?"
"I don't live with my uncle or my grandparents. I don't have grandparents. I don't have an uncle. After my parents were–after they died–I lived with a friend in
"What's that have to do with the cut on your back?"
I kicked at a pile of last fall's leaves, clumped and decomposing, sending them flying. It was a mistake. "Ow!" I limped around in a little circle, favoring my left side. "What I'm trying to say is that I don't want to lie to you. But I don't want to be thought crazy, too, and some of the stuff I want to say sounds terribly crazy."
She pulled her legs up onto the bench under the coat, and hugged them. "What kind of crazy?"
"The people who killed my parents are still trying to kill me. They were trying to kill me when they killed them."
She looked like she was about to cry.
She doesn't believe me. She does think I'm insane.
I held out my hand like a crossing guard stopping oncoming traffic. "Wait. There's proof."
And I jumped away.
She's going to run screaming, I thought, as I ripped the old microfilm newspaper printouts from my plywood gallery.
I jumped back.
She was standing, but she hadn't run. She did have her fist against her mouth. She flinched back and sat down hard as the concrete bench caught the backs of her knees. She began gasping.
I took a step closer and her eyes widened and she leaned away. Well, now I knew how she'd felt when I'd flinched away from her in front of her house, when she'd grabbed my left arm and hurt my back by accident. I moved very slowly and set the papers down on the end of the bench but the minute I let go, the wind threatened to send them flying and I dropped my hand back down.
"Look, they're gonna be all over if you don't take them." I slid them closer to her, careful to stay beyond the end of the bench.
She put her hand down, as far from my hand as possible and yet still on the pages. I straightened up and backed away.
"What was that?" There was suppressed hysteria in her voice. "How did you do that?"
I gestured to the papers. "It ties in. Go ahead, look."
When she'd picked them up I said, "I've got other cuts– older scars," I said quietly. "The top two stories are when they came for me when my parents were alive. I know it says drugs were involved but that was bullshit." I pointed to my right hip, the wound I got that night. "They nearly killed me that night."
She read through the pages, glancing up often to keep track of where I was. "So your name really is Griffin O'Conner."
When she got to the third page she said, "Who's Sam Coulton and Consuelo, uh, Mon–jarraz?" She got the
j
right, a soft
h.
"Sam and Consuelo found me in the desert after... that night. They fixed me up. Later, Consuelo took me to
they
found me again and I had to leave. After that, I lived by myself.
"They held Sam and Consuelo hostage, trying to get me to surrender. When I sent the INS in .. . well, you see what happened."
She read on. She stopped tracking me as she got into the body count. I crossed my right arm over my stomach, pulling my left into my side. I felt my shoulders droop, hunch forward.
The accused is in the dock awaiting the verdict of the jury.
"So why do they want to kill you?"
I shook my head. "I wish I knew for sure."
"It's something to do with, uh, what you just did, right?"
"Yeah–I really think so."
"And what
did
you just do?" She licked her lips. "I mean, I saw you disappear, but where did you go?"
"My place–uh,
"You're kidding me."
I shook my head. "No. Want to see?" I took a step forward.
She held up her hands. "Whoa, boy!"
I stepped back again, the corners of my mouth tugging down.
Please, please, please.
She pointed at the far side of the
cemetery.
"See
the corner
over by the birth control clinic?" It was about two hundred yards away. "Go there. Show me."
I did.
How many Sensitives could there be? Hopefully there wasn't one around here.
I stood there, two hundred yards away, and waved. After a moment, she raised her arm and made a large come–here gesture. I returned, my way. She didn't jerk so much this time when I appeared.
"I suppose it could be drugs. Did you put something in my coffee?"
I shook my head.
"How do you do that?"
"I just do it. When I was five, the first time."
"The Starbucks cup, in Mont–Saint–Michel–you said you'd got it in
that
morning, didn't you?"
I nodded.
It started to rain, fat drops falling at an angle with the wind.
"Shit!" said E.V. "I'm so tired of winter! I want it to be warm." She sounded upset and I didn't think it was the weather.
"I can't make it warm here," I said. "But I can take you someplace that is."
She didn't say no. Her eyes were still wary but her forehead was no longer furrowed.
"How do you feel
about Thai
food?"
We were walking down Kensington High Street on ' our third date when E.V. said, "Let's go in here."
I thought she meant the shoe boutique but she pulled me sideways toward the shop on the corner. "What? The chemist?"
"Yes, the chemist."
I followed her through the door–it was afternoon in
She looked over her shoulder at me and said, "What do
we
need." Then she blushed.
She bought the condoms, Durex brand, and some lubricant but got the cash from me since she only had American.
The clerk looked bored and my ears burned.
Back on the sidewalk she said, "We've two more hours."
I'd offered to show her my place, the Hole, before, but she'd refused. So far she'd let me take her swimming in
"Uh, I've never done it."
She nodded. "I know. I could tell." She stepped up to me and pressed against me. "Don't you want to?"
I nodded mutely.
"Well, then."
It was after, when we were lying in my bed, hip to belly, that she finally found out I was thirteen months younger than her seventeen and a half years.
"Oh, Christ! It's like child abuse!"
I moved my hand sideways and she arched her back. "Well, more fun than self–abuse," I said. "Think of it as charity to a poor orphan boy."
"An orphan boy?"
"An orphan boy."
She sang,
"Oh, men of dark and dismal fate, Forgo your cruel employ, Have pity on my lonely state, I am an orphan boy!"
"Huh?" I was thoroughly confused.
"And you an Englishman!
Pirates of
Gilbert and Sullivan. Got it?"
"Oh. Never saw it. 'Modern Major–General,' right? Okay, have pity on my lonely ... ?"
"State. What time is it? Oh, shit!" She pushed my hands away. "Get me back or I'll be grounded for all time."
I jumped her to the corner of her block, depending on the gathering gloom to hide our sudden appearance. She kissed me and ran up the block, her book bag thumping at her shoulder.
I walked between two parked cars on the street and jumped away.
E.V.'s father had a rough commute, forty–five minutes, so he was rarely home before six. Her mother worked in a middle school in the Neshaminy school district in Pennsylvania– across the river and then some. She rarely made it home before five–thirty. So we had that time between three–fifteen and five–thirty, most weekdays.
"I'm not burning us out, though," she said. "Three times a week, tops."
I had to buy more condoms.
She drew me naked.
Well, naked with a sketchpad.
We drew each other.
And we swam naked in the moonlight at Phuket.
And we ate at little cafes overlooking the
"Madame Breskin says my accent is improving remarkably."
"Lefrangais est la langue de Vamour.
Let's go back to my place."
She laughed. "No. I've barely got time to finish this essay."
My sigh was eloquent.
"Tomorrow. Homework or not," she promised.
But the next day she wasn't there. We'd been meeting at the Shell station, across
I thought about calling but she told me her parents had caller ID, so if I was going to call, do it from where I was supposed to be. With a small mountain of quarters, I stood at a pay phone in
She answered. "Hey," I said.
"Where are you calling from? Ah, where's six–one–nine?"
"
Can you talk?
"I'm pissed. Dad went through my nightstand. He found the sketch I did of you in the nude. When we were sketching?"
"That was a really good sketch. Uh, what did he say? What did
you
say?"
"I said I'd drawn it from my imagination. Also that it was none of his business and if he ever went through my stuff again, I'd leave home." She cleared her throat. "There was some shouting involved."
"When did this happen?"
"Today. He showed up and pulled me out of school last period. Sorry. I'm grounded for a month. He suspects something–I have to come straight home after school and check in with him by phone at work. Can't go anywhere. He'll probably spot check with phone calls."
"What are you going to do?"
"I'll stick it out. My mother's upset, but a bit more at him, I think. I know
they
did it in high school. He's a hypocrite. She's the one who made sure I had condoms when I entered high school."
"Oh, yeah? I knew I liked her." I tried to keep my voice light but I felt like crying. I couldn't imagine not seeing her for an entire month.
"Yeah. We fought like wildcats when I was in middle school but we've come to a pretty good place now. But I'm not speaking to Dad. I predict two weeks, tops, then he'll cave. Maybe even sooner."
That wasn't quite as bad. "Will I be able to call you?"
"Hmmm. I don't see why not. We've got call waiting. He'll know you called, though–he'll check the numbers when he gets home–so make sure it's from