Dad shrugged. “We’re still working on being able to dictate the precise age. Some of the people didn’t de-age as expected, especially when we went beyond forty years or so. But all their memories and knowledge seem to remain.”
My knees started to buckle and I grabbed hold of the nearest crib to stay upright. “Oh, my God! They still know everything? They’re still aware?” I looked down at the creature in the crib, huddled in the fetal position, making the mewling sound I’d heard from outside. “How can you let them suffer like this?”
Dad shook his head slightly. “They did all sign waivers.” He noticed the remote in my hand. “Going to blow us all up?” He started toward me. “All that will do is set off a warning that will only be a drill.” He held out his hand. “Eli, save us all a wasted day of resetting the alarms and hand it over.”
“You’re lying!” I backed toward the wall, trying to edge my way toward the door.
Dad kept coming toward me as he still blocked my way to the door.
I raised the black box up. “Stop! Or I’ll push the button.”
“Eli,” Dad repeated. “It will only set off a drill.” But his eyes weren’t as calm as his voice. Was he afraid?
I took a chance and held up the remote, my finger poised above the button. “Back off or I’ll push it.”
“Fine, fine.” Dad held up his hands and moved to the side so I could get to the door. I backed through it in order to keep an eye on him the whole way, and kept going until something stopped my progress. I glanced behind me.
The machine with the gene gun.
I grabbed the gun and held it out in my other hand.
Dad laughed.
I glanced down at the machine. The dial made no sense, but I saw what looked like a power button and pushed it. With a whir, the entire thing started vibrating. I held the gun out and said, “Stay back.”
Dad shook his head. “Or what? You’ll de-age me?” He laughed again.
I said, “That’s why you didn’t use it on yourself. Because the process isn’t perfected yet.”
The machine beeped. I wondered if that meant it was ready. Dad kept advancing toward me, and I took a firmer hold on the gun in one hand, the black remote in the other. “I won’t let you have my family.”
Dad frowned. “They’re my family, too. You’re all my family.”
I shook my head. “Not anymore. Not after what you did. And I won’t let you do it again.”
“We can talk about this later,” said Dad. “There’s been a slight change of plans. I’ve decided your brother and sister should go back to Seattle. You can stay here until the rest of them come.”
“They won’t leave without me,” I said.
Dad laughed. “Really? You think they love you that much that they’d stay here and wait for you to come get them? You really believe that?” He shook his head.
The gun trembled in my hand and I felt my chin wobble.
Would I stay for them?
And I realized that I already was staying for them. I was standing here in this room in order to take them with me, get us home. I swallowed, and said with the most conviction I could muster, “I do believe it.”
Suddenly, Tony was there. He told Dad, “The jet is ready to go.” He looked at me. “You ready?”
Dad had lied to me. He hadn’t changed his mind. At least, not the way he told me he had.
“No!” Dad shouted. “None of them are leaving! My wife can bring the rest of my family here if she ever wants to see them again.” He lunged for me.
I stumbled, trying hard to hold on to the gene gun, that as I fell, I accidentally squeezed the button on the black remote.
Immediately, a deafening high-pitched electronic beeping began.
Dad was on top of me, grabbing for the gene gun. I shoved it out toward him, my finger pulling the trigger with the hope it would shock him or something. As it connected with his stomach, my finger got stuck, keeping the trigger on for several seconds. I heard several mechanical punching sounds.
Dad rolled off me to the floor. His eyes widened and he tried to get up, but fell back. His limbs began to shake and he started convulsing.
I jumped to my feet and backed away.
As Tony and I watched, my father’s hair turned darker and thicker and curlier, growing longer before our eyes. Immediately his limbs began to shrivel and shrink; then his fingers folded in on his hands and his feet curled up.
“What’s happening?” I yelled.
Tony yelled back, “He’s de-aging!”
My father’s limbs continued to shrivel, but they stopped getting smaller. They were deflating, like a balloon that had lost its air. And then he was suddenly still. His flesh hung there, saggy, just like the creatures in the cribs.
Tony said, “My, God, it didn’t work on him.”
My father, the creature that had been Rex Yanakakis, reached up for me and mewled, “Son.”
I stood there, looking down at him, unable to move.
“Kid!” Tony grabbed me. “This place is gonna blow.”
I yelled, “He told me it was a drill!”
The expression on Tony’s face was serious when he shook his head. He didn’t need to say a word.
I said, “But we have to help him!”
Tony pointed at the open door to the room with the cribs. “Like he helps them? Leaving them in there like that?” He shook his head. “They need to be put out of their misery.” He pointed at my father. “So does he.” Tony grabbed me. “Do you want to live?”
I nodded.
“This place will be a chain reaction. As soon as I hear the first explosion, I’m going,” he said. “With or without you. You’ve got about nine minutes, kid.” And he disappeared through the plastic curtain.
I turned back to my dad, who still lay on the floor, curled up and mewling. I knelt beside him, wanting to throw up, wanting to run away. I set my hand on his arm. It was soft and mushy, and I yanked my hand back.
Dad tried to say something, but I couldn’t understand what it was. I didn’t want to understand. I stood up. “I’m sorry.”
Only thirty seconds behind Tony, I ran through the plastic curtain and down the hallway. Outside, the sun hit me. And I realized Eddy and Lexie weren’t going to be at the jet.
Maybe, when Dad hadn’t shown up at the house, they decided to go to the jet, ignoring my orders?
But if I went to the jet and they weren’t there… I’d have no time to get them. I couldn’t risk it.
If I wanted to save them, there was only one option.
The electronic beeping was everywhere, increasing in speed and volume. As fast as I could, I ran through the plaza toward the house, dodging people who seemed to be unconcerned about the alarm. Apparently, they’d been told, and believed, that it was just a drill.
I hurried through the fence and onto the path and into the house, screaming, “Eddy! Lexie! Where are you?” I ran into the living room and saw no one. I screamed their names a few more times, then made a decision. They had to be at the jet. They hadn’t listened to me.
I ran down the hallway and out the back. I leaped down the steps of the marble veranda, hit the path, and went through the door in the wall.
I heard a roar. The jet.
“No!” I yelled. I tried to run on the boardwalk through the jungle, but it was slow going and I was forced to shorten my steps, pounding my way toward the runway. Finally, I reached the trees and caught a glimpse of the runway. I sprinted the rest of the way, triumphantly emerging out of breath where the jet had been the day before.
But the jet was gone.
About a quarter mile away to my right, the taxiing jet was just about to reach the end of the runway, where it would turn around and accelerate down the length of the runway and take off.
Читать дальше