The Meridians

30.

 

***

 

Scott finally left Lynette's house at a bit past three in the morning. And didn't want to.

 

But he knew that they both felt that they had played out their "research" for the time being when, still holding hands, Lynette asked, "What about Kevin?"

 

"Well, he's what started this whole line of questioning, obviously," answered Scott.

 

"'Obviously,'" Lynette quoted, and stuck out her tongue in mock anger. "What a perfectly male answer." But he noted that she didn't pull her hand away from his. In a way it made him nervous: he hadn't held anyone in any way since Amy's death, so to suddenly find himself holding hands with someone as intelligent, beautiful, sassy, and bright as Lynette was the very definition of jumping in at the deep end.

 

Even so, as nervous as it made him, it didn't come close to making him nervous enough to withdraw his hand.

 

"Did you have something more in mind?" he asked.

 

"Yes. Have you forgotten today?"

 

Scott pursed his lips and mulled that over. He knew Lynette was no longer talking about the complicated mathematical information that Kevin had typed - and probably had been typing for some time before today. Even he knew enough about autism to know that some autistic children had gifts of extreme intellectual ability. Though he doubted that, if investigated, either of them would be able to find an autistic child who was gifted to the level that Kevin had shown himself to be.

 

No, he knew she was talking about the other thing. The thing that had brought them together today. The event at the supermarket where Kevin had stopped a family from dying, and probably more from being injured, by his actions.

 

How had he done that? Though autistics possessed prodigious mental abilities in some arenas, he doubted that foresight would be listed as one of them on any of the many autistic support groups or listservs that Lynette had told him about.

 

So how had it happened? What had Kevin done? Had he merely seen the future in some way? Or was it more than that; more complex than that?

 

Scott did not know. Though he suspected that, if revealed, Kevin's "gift" would not show itself to be something as simple or easily explained as mere foresight. No, something much deeper - more fundamental - than a psychic trick had to be involved. Scott didn't know how he knew it but he felt it in his bones. It was the same feeling he would have had if someone had asked how he knew he was human. Of course there were characteristics that could be examined, DNA samples that could be taken, other tests that could be run. But the simplest and most convincing answer to Scott was that he simply knew he was human; that he simply thought it, and simply was.

 

He didn't say all this to Lynette, however. For one thing, he didn't have the words to express it in a way that would drive home the certainty that he had in this area. For another, he would have felt silly even trying, since his certainty amounted to no more than a certainty of a negative: that Kevin was not merely a mind reader or a fortuneteller, but something of much more fundamental importance than that.

 

So he shrugged, and said, "You got me there. I have no idea what to make of Kevin." He tapped a pile of papers: a printout of some of the work they had discovered on Kevin's laptop. "Though I think we should send this to some college professors or something as soon as possible to be tested."

 

"You want Kevin to be tested?" said Lynette, and now she did withdraw her hand from his, and it felt like a substantial part of Scott's life had departed with it.

 

"No," said Scott, both aching for the return of her hand to his and at the same time wondering at how much of what he had thought was dead inside that this woman had managed to awaken. "I don't think it would be a good idea for anyone to test Kevin. I meant I think we should just send these papers anonymously, via a made-up email or something, to some physics professor at the U of I or Boise State or some other college around here; see what they say."

 

"What do you think that could tell us?"

 

Scott shrugged again. "Don't know. Though I suspect that whoever we send the stuff to will either want to fall down at the feet of whoever wrote it and worship him, or will want to stone him as some sort of modern-day practitioner of dark arts." He grinned, but there was more than a little bit of seriousness hiding behind the uptilted corners of his mouth. "Those are the two most likely responses in academia whenever you do something extraordinary."

 

And that was the end of things. Sadly - very sadly, he reflected - there was no more hand-holding. Not that Lynette grew angry or withdrawn in any way; she was still as bright, interesting, and interested seeming as she had been at any time in the night. Just the moment for hand-holding had passed, and both of them seemed to know it equally.

 

He bid her goodnight soon after, promising to call her the next day as soon as he awoke so they could talk some more about this mystery that not only fascinated them both but, he suspected, was also a matter of survival for them all.

 

The drive home was more difficult than he would have believed. Not only was he going back to an empty house, but he was going back to a house that he now knew would seem even more empty than ever before, because not only was he alone...but Lynette was not going to be there. That sounded like a silly thing to say, even in his own mind, but he knew it was true. Something had happened tonight, and being alone no longer meant merely that he was in a place where no one else was present. It meant being in a place - even a crowded room - where Lynette was not at.

 

And Kevin. Kevin, who was so beautiful of face that it made Scott want to cry, so soft of spirit that he couldn't even look at you straight on because such a connection would overwhelm his tender heart, so good of soul that he had braved the terror of being alone in a supermarket parking lot - something that Lynette had impressed on him was completely extraordinary in much the same way that a man throwing himself on a hand grenade to save his comrades would be - in order to save a stranger and her baby.

 

Kevin who was just about the same age Chad had been when taken from Scott.

 

But unlike most boys that age, who just made Scott ache with longing and sadness, Kevin made him feel...whole. As though he had found someone who, while not replacing Chad or usurping his position as Scott's son in any way, had nonetheless found a way to heal the open wound in Scott's heart that Chad's passing had left behind.

 

Kevin and Lynette. Lynette and Kevin. A family.

 

His new family.

 

What? he thought in surprise. Where did that come from?

 

But he knew the answer even as he asked it. It came from the same place that his life with Amy had come from.

 

For the second time in his life, Scott had found people who made him remember what it was to live in the happiness and almost unimaginable wonder of "once upon a time."

 

Once upon a time, Scott Cowley found a second family.

 

He smiled.

 

Then he felt the steering wheel spin under his hand. For a split second he thought that something had gone dreadfully wrong with the steering in his car. But only for a split second.

 

Because in the next fraction of a second he realized that he had turned the wheel. And not merely turned it; he had spun it like a stunt driver rounding a corner of an obstacle course, like a presidential driver spinning the wheel of an armored limo to avoid a hail of machine-gun fire.

 

And in the fraction of a second after he realized that he was the one doing it, he also realized why. It was his sixth sense again, his cop sense. Picking up on something that he had not noticed consciously until several eternally long moments later.

 

Scott looked around and, even as he continued spinning the wheel to catch up to what he had seen, he felt his jaw drop in horror, surprise, and rage.

 

Not tonight, he thought. Not this night, not this wonderful night.

 

As quick as that, all thoughts of the wonders of Kevin's mind, the joys of Lynette's smile, and the terrifying magnificence of once upon a time all flew from his mind, replaced by a single thing.

 

Mr. Gray. Standing in an alley on the side of the street.

 

Smiling at him.

 

Beckoning to him.

 

 

 

 

 

***

 

 

 

 

 

Michaelbrent Collings's books