“I really am sorry,” Jo said simply. “About everything.”
Josie caught sight of her mom sitting on the edge of Jo’s bed. “It worked out.”
“I suppose I could have told you,” Jo continued, speaking in a very calm, deliberate tone. “About our moms, and about what my father was.” She looked up at Josie. “He told me one day that he’d tried to kill my mom. And if I didn’t do exactly as he said, I’d be next. He was deranged.”
“I’m so sorry, Jo.”
Jo shrugged, and her carefree attitude immediately returned. “Oh well, he’s dead. Too bad, so sad.”
Jo may have been totally unfazed by her father’s gruesome death, but the thought of Mr. Byrne’s mangled body made Josie shiver. As happy as she was that he was gone, it was a death that would haunt her for the rest of her life.
Jo glanced at Nick, then back to Josie. “So you’re really going back?”
Josie’s stomach clenched. The time was rapidly approaching when she’d have to make a decision: stay or go. She honestly wasn’t sure which it would be. “I think so.”
Jo stared at her for a moment, assessing; then her eyes drifted down to Dr. Byrne’s necklace that still hung around Josie’s neck.
“Oh,” Josie said. “Right. You probably want this back.” She reached up and placed her hand on the necklace, two entwined hearts. Josie and Nick. He hadn’t given it to her, but somehow it had come to symbolize all that they’d been through together, and the idea of taking it off was almost as painful as the idea of leaving Nick forever.
Jo continued to stare at the necklace. “You really thought Nick gave that to me.”
Josie nodded.
“You’re in love with him, aren’t you?”
Josie nodded again. “Yeah.”
Jo’s face was blank and impassive. “But you were going to give him up. Back at Fort Meade, you said you’d save him for me.”
“Yeah.” She had said that. And she’d meant it, realizing at the time that the odds of her and Nick actually being together were very slim.
“You know, he’s the only guy that ever said ‘no’ to me. I think that’s what made me want him so badly.” Jo pointed to the necklace. “You keep it. As if he gave it to you.” Then she turned on her heel and walked to the window.
Josie’s mom sat on Jo’s bed staring at the mirror. “I can’t believe it’s all come down to that wretched mirror.”
Josie sat down next to her and squeezed her hand. “Think of it this way: if the initial explosion hadn’t established a connection between the two mirrors, I never would have known you were gone, never would have been able to come here and find you.”
Her mom sighed. “That’s one way of looking at it.”
“Personally,” Nick said with a smile, “I kinda love that mirror.”
Josie looked at Nick. Despite his smile, his eyes were sad. Her heart ached at what was coming, and when Nick twitched his head toward the hallway, Josie stood up and followed.
“Stay,” Nick said as soon as the bedroom door closed behind them. “Stay here with me.”
“I can’t. My mom needs me.”
“I need you.”
Josie swallowed. “Come with me, then.”
Nick reached up and cupped her cheek with his hand. “But my brother . . .”
“I know.” Josie dropped her eyes. She leaned forward and rested her head against his chest, listening to the rapid beat of his heart. Could she stay? Her mom was going home to her dad, and hopefully they’d be able to reconcile once Dad knew the whole story. With Tony completing the Nox injectable and Dr. Byrne there to oversee the eradication, this universe would be safer. She could send her mom home with the formula to help do the same in her world. And besides, maybe she could contribute something here, explore the physics of this universe with a different perspective. It was an enticing possibility.
But the only thing that really mattered to her was Nick.
“Okay.”
They said it in unison, both Josie and Nick. Josie looked up and Nick’s head was tilted to the side. “Did you say ‘okay’?”
“Yeah.” Josie laughed. “Did you?”
“Yeah.”
That was it. They needed each other, were desperate to be together no matter whose universe they chose. Josie’s heart ached from happiness. She’d never felt this way with her ex-boyfriend. This was something different. Something deeper. Even though they had only known each other a few days, Nick knew her better than anyone else, and loved her even more because of it.
Nick wrapped his arms around her, pulling her body to his. When his lips touched hers she reached for his neck, grasping frantically at his wavy hair. Nick pressed her against the wall, kissing her cheek, her jaw, her neck. She’d do whatever he wanted her to, stay or go. She’d never believed in fate, thought it was something for the weak-minded to find comfort in. But in that moment, she knew that fate did exist. Because Nick—this Nick—was her fate.
Just then the house shook violently. Nick broke away, bracing himself against the wall with one arm, the other still laced behind Josie’s back. It felt like an earthquake, or at least how Josie imagined an earthquake would feel. Only it didn’t weaken. After a few seconds, the shaking was getting stronger, so violent Josie had a hard time standing upright.
Jo flung the bedroom door open. “Something’s wrong.”
Josie and Nick ran into the room. The portal had opened and on the other side, Josie could see Penelope and her dad standing in front of the large X-FEL rig in their basement.
Dr. Byrne had already come through the portal. She stood in the middle of Jo’s bedroom, a look of panic on her face.
“I didn’t know,” she said to Josie’s mom. “I thought my husband had Jo. I thought he’d be here when the portal opened. I . . .” She looked up at Josie. “I didn’t know what to do.”
The rumbling intensified. Inside the mirror, a massive hole was forming. The thick substance of the portal swirled around it, picking up speed as the hole grew larger.
Josie grabbed Dr. Byrne by the arm. “What’s happening?”
“I calibrated the X-FEL to hold the portal open,” Dr. Byrne said. “Until I could figure out what happened to my daughter.”
“To hold it open?”
Dr. Byrne nodded. “Only it’s growing too quickly. The gravitational field is accelerating beyond the bounds of its force.”
Josie stared at the widening hole in the portal. “At this rate, the field will collapse in on itself.”
“Isn’t that what we want?” Nick said. “To close the portal?”
Josie shook her head. “This will close the portal, all right. And destroy both of our worlds in the process.”
Josie’s mom staggered to her feet. “Oh dear God.”
“Can we stop it?” Josie said. “Shut the laser down?”
Dr. Byrne shook her head. “It’s too late. Turning off the laser won’t stop the process.”
“Wave interference,” Josie’s mom said. “A wave-interference pattern will cancel out the beam.”
Dr. Byrne’s face lit up. “If it’s of equal strength, it should disrupt the field completely, breaking the portal for good.”
“Equal strength?” Nick said. “I don’t suppose you’ve got another X-FEL lying around the house?”
Josie shook her head and smiled, remembering her science experiment in AP Physics. “But we’ve got some mirrors.”
4:10 P.M.
Josie’s mom passed through the portal first to explain to her husband and Penelope what they needed. Penelope dashed upstairs and Josie watched with a fluttering heart as her dad lifted her mom into his arms and hugged her.
On her side, Jo and Nick had retrieved the large mirror from above the fireplace downstairs and lugged it into Jo’s bedroom. Once Penelope was on the other side with a similar mirror, Josie began directing their placement.
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