We run into Chris and Trent outside—or rather, they crash into us. Before I can ask why or tell them what happened to us, Chris says, “This way. Hurry!”
He rushes past the stores and around the back, into an area behind the shopping center where deliveries are probably dropped off. I don’t know where we’re going or why we’re running, but I’m happy to get away from Smartgear and out of sight.
Chris stops between two huge trucks that look similar to the ones in our time except they don’t have a spot for drivers to sit. He and Trent check to make sure no one is following us. “Okay,” he says. “There’s some crazy shit going on here. The stores won’t take cash, and when they scanned us, we weren’t in the system.”
“The same thing happened to us,” I say.
That means four of us aren’t in the system. Everyone is missing except Adam. The empty research facility was just the beginning of our problems. It must all be connected.
“Seriously?” Chris runs a hand over his shaved head. “How can we all not be in the system?”
“It might be related to whatever happened to Aether Corporation,” Adam says, echoing my own thoughts.
“Maybe,” Chris says. “All I know is, we couldn’t buy anything. But Trent picked something up anyway.”
“Check this out.” Trent pulls something that looks like a pen from his coat. “It’s like a laser that heals you. Awesome, right?”
“Wait, did you steal that?” Adam asks.
Trent shrugs and lights up a cigarette. “They can have it back in twenty-four hours.”
Chris narrows his eyes at Adam’s bag. “How’d you get your stuff?”
I hesitate, but they’ll find out the truth soon enough. “Adam was in the system.”
“What?” Chris takes a step toward Adam. “Is there something you’re not telling us, smart guy?”
“No! I have no idea why I’m in the system and you’re not.”
“I think you’re lying. I think you know exactly what’s going on.” He shoves Adam in the chest, knocking him back into the side of the truck.
Trent throws his cigarette on the ground and moves forward to join in. “Did you know we’d be going thirty years in the future instead of ten?”
I’m getting really tired of these assholes. I step in front of Chris and Trent. “Leave him alone. He doesn’t know anything.”
“How do you know that?” Chris asks. “You don’t know anything about him!”
“I know he’s not a thief like you two.” I clench my fists, ready to fight them both. All the pent-up frustration from the last few hours bubbles to the surface, and my muscles ache to unleash it on these two. It’s not their fault everything is going wrong, but they’re not helping things either.
“Oh my God, stop fighting!” Zoe huddles against the truck, tugging her jacket around herself. Her eyes are wide and fearful. A memory rises up from when I was a kid, cowering under a table and scared out of my mind while my parents fought. I’m disgusted with myself as I see Zoe looking at me now with the same fear. I drop my hands and take a step back.
“She’s right,” Adam says at my side. “We need to work together.”
“Work together?” Trent snickers. “That’s hilarious.”
Chris points a finger at Adam. “You’re lucky your girlfriend is here to protect you. This time.”
My temper flares up again. “He’s not my—”
“Yeah, whatever.” Chris crosses his arms and glares at us. “So what’s your plan?”
No one answers. The question is too big. Nothing’s gone right since we arrived in the future. Hell, we’re not even in the right time period.
Maybe something bad happened to us in the thirty years between our time and now. Aether told us not to look into our futures because it could send us into shock and cause brain damage—but what if they’re wrong?
Or what if that’s all a lie, and they don’t want us to do it because we’ll discover what’s actually going on?
I have to know why I’m not in the system. Even if it damages my brain, I need to know my fate.