“I had an abortion, Joel.”
I was rendered speechless. Before I could formulate a response, she continued on. “It was during sophomore year, before I met you. I had too much to drink at a party. I ran into an old boyfriend, and one thing led to another. I was on birth control. Nothing’s a hundred percent, I guess. About a month later, I realized I was pregnant. Keeping it was never an option. I had career plans, and my dad wasn’t doing well, so I…” She paused and looked at me. I couldn’t tell if she was trying to read my reaction or expecting me to react. “I’m sorry I never told you.”
“Wow. I don’t really know what to say. Are you okay? That came out wrong. I mean, I really don’t know how to respond.”
“Yeah, I’m okay. I definitely don’t regret my decision. That’s not it. I still feel like it was the right thing for me to do—”
“Syl, what’s going on?”
She shrugged, wiping a tear from her eye. “Work stress? I don’t know. I’m having to deal with some big decisions, stuff I can’t really get into. And there’s this part of me that always remembers, that always questions the what-if of what I did, and I guess the moral implications. I did it so early, Joel, that it was no bigger than this grain of rice.” She held up the tiniest doll for me to see again. “It was really just a cluster of cells.” She paused, looking down at it. “But I guess I’ll always wonder, if I’d waited longer—would I have made the same choice?”
Tears began to run down her face. I pulled her into my arms. Seeing my wife in pain was harder than anything I could ever endure. “I love you, Syl. You made the right choice.”
“Thank you,” she whispered as she buried her head into my shoulder.
“I’m sorry.”
“‘I don’t believe in apologies; I believe in actions,’” she said, then wiped her face and gave me a kiss. “Let’s get back to unpacking. This doll’s not pulling its weight.” She smiled, then we kissed again.
Joel2 didn’t remember any of this as he came out of the bathroom in his birthday suit, but it seems pertinent to include now. I would learn later that that was the day Sylvia had been briefed on the truth behind teleportation—that it was a process of replication and destruction—but she was forbidden from discussing it with me. I can’t imagine what it must have been like for her, to carry around that kind of toxic secret for nearly a year. And now William Taraval stood before her in Costa Rica, demanding she abort her husband. She was shaken, barely able to look at my unfortunate doppelg?nger.
“We were just talking about you, my boy,” Taraval said after Joel2 failed to respond to his introduction. “My apologies for the interruption, but I’m afraid with the terrorist attack on IT, Sylvia must return to New York. Desperate times, measures, you understand.”
Joel2 turned to Sylvia and asked, “This is your”—he left out the jerk—“boss?”
Sylvia shook her head, still unable to acknowledge her husband.
“Quite right. I run research and development at International Transport. Sylvia is the principal scientist on my team. Which is why we need her back. To help clean up this … mess. I have transportation ready to take us to San José, but it’s late and I can see you’ve had a long day. Perhaps first thing tomorrow? What do you say, Sylvia?”
She ran to the bathroom, slamming the door shut.
Joel2 ran to check on her. “Syl? You okay?”
Heaves, coughs, and whimpers were all he could hear.
“Yes, well, unfortunately I was the bearer of some bad news,” Taraval continued, moving to the door. “Some of our peers perished in the explosion. I can’t tell you what a relief it was to learn Sylvia wasn’t among them.”
“Well, she’s doing great now!” Joel2 said sarcastically. “Thanks a lot for that.”
“Yes, it seems she has taken their deaths more viscerally than anticipated. Still, there remain other matters of life and death, with which we need her assistance. I truly hope you two can salvage your holiday some other time. First thing tomorrow, then!” he called toward the bathroom door, then started down the stairs.
“?Hasta luego!” chimed the door behind him.
Joel2, still scantily clad in his towel, went back to tap on the bathroom door. The wind outside had picked up and could be heard rustling the tree branches. He sat down on the floor beside the bathroom, his back leaning against the wall.
Eventually Sylvia opened the bathroom door and pensively sat beside Joel2, sniffling. He put his arm around her, kissing the top of her head. She smelled of soap and mouthwash.
“Syl, I’m so sorry about your friends.”
“No, I’m sorry,” she said. Her body was shaking or shivering, he couldn’t tell. “I did something really bad, Joel.”
“A bunch of crazies who think teleportation is the devil blew up a bunch of people to prove their point. Is what you did worse than that?”
“I don’t know,” she said, finally looking into his eyes. “I honestly don’t know. When it happened earlier today, I couldn’t bear the thought of losing you. I panicked. I—I couldn’t reveal what I was working on, not specifically, but I told you the basics last week at the Mandolin—extending the range of teleportation, exploring outer space, that kind of thing?”
Joel2 blinked. “That wasn’t a drunken hypothetical?”
“No. The thing I’m working on, Project Honeycomb—really it’s just an evolution of the Punch Escrow. But I never thought—” She stopped talking and just sort of gazed forward.
“Never thought what?” Joel2 gently prodded.
“When Corina Shafer invented the Punch Escrow, it was a fail-safe feature. She knew that the biggest risk of teleportation was data loss or corruption. The Punch Escrow was brilliant, if only for its simplicity: an ephemeral cache of the thing being teleported.”
“That’s the four-second time delay?”
“Sort of,” she said, now averting her gaze. “The glacier storage costs for a single scan of a teleported human—twenty years ago they were astronomical. After each teleportation, successful or not, the … data needed to be cleared immediately to get ready for the next object. Honeycomb is a project that investigates the use of a backup instead of a cache. It’s the only way we could initially send people to a planet in another solar system, for example. Humans wouldn’t survive the flight, and even if we put them in torpor, the mortality rates go through the roof. The probability of something going wrong in transit and killing the crew increases exponentially with time, making such missions untenable. But if we didn’t have to worry about hundreds of years of life support, if we could just put a TC on a spacecraft, then—”