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A New Beginning

Page 11

by Kevin Ryan


  had had a fight. It would not be unusual. In fact, it would

  be par for the course.

  "What happened in here?" Michael asked, before Max

  could say anything.

  Michael surveyed the room and then said, "I mean,

  what did you guys do in here?"

  "Just freshened things up a bit," Isabel said. "It was a

  little depressing."

  Michael took in the changes. The walls, which had been

  battered and pitted Sheetrock, were now smooth. Before, the

  original color had been anybody's guess because of the grime

  on the faded walls. Now the walls were blue and looked

  freshly painted. Isabel must have been using her powers.

  Looking around the room, Michael took in the rest of

  the changes. The shelf looked like it had been refinished.

  The hot plate looked like new, and so did the sink. The

  beanbag chairs looked new and were no longer held

  together with duct tape.

  Isabel had reattached the television's antenna and

  cleaned up the set as well.

  * * *

  Michael shook his head. "Way to keep a low profile

  guys," he said. Then he turned to Max and said, "You

  allowed this?"

  Max was uncomfortable, and it showed on his face.

  "Haven't you heard? Max is just a fellow traveler, Michael.

  He's not making all the rules here," Isabel said.

  Michael turned to her and said, "Why did this feel like

  your work?"

  "Oh, lighten up, Michael. We just did something nice

  for the guy who's letting us stay here," she said.

  "Very nice, and we could maybe explain the walls, but

  how are you going to explain that you reconditioned the

  appliances?" he asked.

  Michael turned back to Max and said, "Well?"

  Max put his hands up and said, "I was against it."

  "Well, as long as you lodged a formal protest," Michael said.

  "Maybe I went too far on some of it, but we can always

  change it back before we go," Isabel said.

  Michael shrugged and sat down on the floor. He looked

  at Max and said, "I just want to point out how screwy things

  have gotten if I am the voice of reason around here."

  Shaking his head, Michael added, "So much for democ-

  racy. How long before dinner?"

  Isabel looked up at the wall, which held a clock with a

  picture of a cowboy on its face. When they arrived, the

  clock had been worn and broken. Now it kept perfect time

  and looked new.

  Max knew Michael was right. They had to be more

  careful.

  "Just under an hour and a half," Isabel said.

  "What's the game?" Michael asked.

  * * *

  "Fizzbin," Max replied.

  "Fizz-what?" Michael said.

  "We'll explain as we play," Isabel said as she dealt out

  the cards.

  Liz put her last dinner order down in front of the last two of

  the latecomers. The locals all ate early, Bell explained, but

  the people who commuted to Pueblo came in later. From

  what Liz saw, a lot of people commuted to Pueblo. There

  didn't seem to be much work in this town. She also noted

  that there wasn't a single woman or girl who came in alone.

  They just didn't wander around by themselves in

  Stonewall. And now Liz knew that it was for a good reason.

  Someone was preying on the women in town. For a

  moment, she felt a flash of shame for letting Maria walk to

  the garage by herself. Liz had been shaken by her vision of

  Jimmy's future and had been too absorbed in her own

  thoughts to even think about the danger to Maria. She had

  felt better when she called Johnny's and the girl who'd

  answered had said that Maria had arrived fine. Liz had felt

  even better when Maria had come back with Michael in tow.

  Maria came in with a frown on her face, and one look at

  Michael's face told Liz why. Another fight. Liz had asked,

  but Maria hadn't wanted to talk about it, and soon enough

  the dinner rush started.

  Jimmy had watched Liz throughout the rest of the shift,

  but had not said anything to her. Liz was glad for that,

  then ashamed of herself. She was ashamed that she had

  avoided looking at him. But she didn't want to see what

  was in his eyes. She could feel the pain well enough with-

  out seeing it.

  * * *

  And she didn't want him to see what was in hers.

  One of the reasons she had left with Max was so that

  they could be together and find some semblance of peace.

  So they could live together without fear . . . and without

  shame.

  But that was not the only reason. They had also wanted

  to stop living only for themselves—living only to protect

  their precious secret. The secret of the alien-ness that had

  lived inside of Max, Michael, and Isabel. It now lived

  inside Liz and would probably one day take up residence

  in Kyle as well. They had left Roswell so they could use

  their secret and their powers to help other people. Like

  Tom Joad in The Crapes of Wrath, Liz herself had said.

  Doing good deeds and avoiding the law.

  And she had believed in that idea.

  And two days later she was avoiding the gaze of a boy

  whom she could not help.

  Can't or won't? a voice in Liz's head said.

  Shame.

  There was danger here. Liz could feel it. She had sensed

  it very clearly when she'd had her vision of Jimmy at his

  sister's funeral. She had sensed it very strongly when she

  had seen the room that was not quite a room. And she had

  heard it in the girl's screams—a lost, terrified sound that

  she knew would visit her in her dreams for some time.

  Whatever had Jessica was going to kill her. And he was

  very dangerous. No, not he, Liz thought. It's a they. She

  didn't know how she knew that, but something in the

  vision told her that it was a they—a very dangerous they.

  Liz forced herself to look at Jimmy. He was clearing the

  last empty table. As if he felt his eyes on her, he turned to

  * * *

  return her look a few seconds later. He smiled at her. It

  was a grim smile that didn't belong on his innocent face.

  Liz smiled back. Then she felt something move inside her.

  She had been afraid to look at Jimmy before, but she

  had done it. There was something else Liz was afraid of,

  very afraid, and it wasn't whoever had Jimmy's sister and

  the other missing girls in this town.

  It was shame. She couldn't face it, and then she knew

  she didn't have to.

  Almost immediately, the cloud started lifting. She walked

  over to Jimmy and put a hand on his shoulder. Though she

  was relieved when no visions came, she knew she would

  face them when they did come . . . without fear.

  Liz knew she had made the right decision.

  "Come on, Parker. We've got side work to do," Maria said.

  Max saw Liz through the window. He felt a moment of

  relief when he saw that she was there. He knew his worries

  were probably baseless. She would be safe inside a

  crowded diner. He was sure of it. Yet,
he was still relieved

  to see her.

  As soon as he did see her, though, he realized that

  something was wrong. Something was bothering her.

  Almost as soon as he realized that, she was heading for the

  door. She was there as he stepped inside.

  "Hi," she said, her voice even.

  Max leaned down to kiss her and said, "Hi." He

  couldn't ask her what it was now. That conversation would

  have to wait until they were alone.

  "You guys can sit down over here," Liz said, pointing to

  a long table near the center of the empty diner.

  * * *

  A woman Max recognized from yesterday came out

  from the kitchen. A smile appeared on her face, and she

  said, "Girls, are these your friends?"

  Liz and Maria nodded together.

  "Well, sit down," the woman said, gesturing to the table.

  "I'm Bell," she added when they had all sat.

  Liz stepped forward and said, "This is Max, Isabel,

  Michael, and Kyle," pointing to each one as she spoke

  their name.

  "Pleased to meet you," Bell said.

  Then she turned to Liz and Maria and said, "You sit

  down too."

  Liz started to protest, but Bell shushed her with a wave.

  Looking at Max, Bell said, "They have been on their feet

  for nearly twelve hours straight. Best help we've ever had

  here." As Liz and Maria sat, Bell took out a pad. "Now

  what can I get you kids?"

  After she had taken their order, Bell disappeared into

  the kitchen. The door shut behind her and drowned out

  any sounds from the kitchen.

  Once Liz was sitting, Max could see that she was tired.

  Maria, too. They had been working a double shift. Max felt

  a pang. He had done nothing to help their cause, while Liz

  and Maria had worked twelve hours in a row. Kyle, too.

  I'm some leader, he thought.

  Then he noticed that Liz kept glancing at the boy from

  yesterday, the one with Down's syndrome. He was sitting

  in a booth next to the window, staring out and down trie

  street. "Do you want to invite him to sit with us?" Max

  asked Liz.

  She shook her head. "I already did. Bell says that he

  * * *

  likes to sit by himself at the end of the day and look for his

  sister."

  "How long has she been gone?" Max asked.

  "Almost a week," Liz said. There was something in her

  voice and face that told Max there was something else,

  something she wasn't telling him. Instead, she turned to

  Kyle and asked, "So how was work at Johnny's?"

  Kyle and Michael told the girls the same story Max had

  heard on the walk over.

  "So Gomer is dangerous?" Maria asked, when they were

  finished.

  Kyle shrugged and said, "Since Michael had a talk with

  him, I think he's mostly in danger of wetting himself."

  Though Kyle smiled when he said that, Max could see

  that their friend had been shaken up by his experience.

  "So you did do something worthwhile today, Michael,"

  Maria said.

  Michael shrugged at that, and Max could see that he was

  uncomfortable. It looked like everyone was on edge today.

  Max was surprised. Stonewall hadn't looked like much of a

  town—the fact was, it still didn't look like much. But it was

  definitely dangerous. Women were missing. Crazed tow

  truck drivers were thrown into fits of jealous rage. Some-

  thing was going on here. Up until now, Max had thought

  the biggest danger they faced in Stonewall was being out of

  money. Max decided that he, Michael, and Isabel would

  have to keep an eye on the others.

  It looked like there was something for him to do here.

  A few minutes after Bell had brought their food out, she and

  Sam emerged from the kitchen with plates for themselves.

  * * *

  Liz and Maria immediately rose and started moving another

  table to add to theirs so that everyone would be able to sit

  together.

  Pointing to the now larger table, Liz said, "Join us."

  She didn't have to look to know that Max was giving

  her a look—probably Michael, too. But there were things

  she needed to know, things that were more important than

  avoiding other people to keep their secret.

  "You sure you want a couple of old farts intruding?"

  Bell asked.

  "Don't be silly, just sit," Liz said.

  Bell nodded and said, "Kids, this is my husband, Sam.

  Sam, these are Liz and Maria's friends."

  Sam gave them a short nod as the older couple sat

  down to eat.

  "So what are you kids doing on the road in that van of

  yours?" Bell asked.

  For a second, no one spoke, and Liz glanced at Max.

  She saw that the others were doing the same.

  Max didn't hesitate further. "We all just graduated from

  high school. We wanted to see the country and to stay

  together for a while," he said.

  Liz was relieved. It was a good story. It was also true ...

  as far as it went.

  Bell turned to Sam and said, "We should have done

  something like that when we were kids."

  Sam gave a snort but didn't look up from his food.

  Turning to the group, she smiled and said, "Sam is not

  the adventurous type. But I'm glad to see you kids doing

  what you want. You'll have plenty of time later to settle

  down into jobs and a normal life."

  * * *

  Will we? Liz wondered. Will we ever?

  She watched as Bell reached her fork onto Sam's plate

  and ate something from it. There was something very

  familiar and warm about the gesture. Liz was sure that the

  two did have something together.

  Something good. Something normal.

  Something that was impossible for the six of them now.

  Something that was impossible for her; even if she did

  somehow sever her connection to her half-alien boyfriend,

  could she find a normal life for herself?

  In that last three years she had spent countless hours

  hoping for that normality, but she had been changed by

  her experience. Even if she could somehow forget every-

  thing that had happened in the last three years, she was no

  longer the girl she once was. In fact, she was no longer

  completely human.

  She was no longer normal.

  When the changes in her body first showed themselves,

  she had been scared. Now with her new abilities even

  more pronounced, she was still scared, but there was

  something else. She was determined not to let the fear rule

  her life. Determined that she would do something other

  than suffer as ...

  Max's codependant girlfriend, as she had once said to

  Maria.

  She was going to do something to make a difference

  with the new part of herself. And she was going to start

  right now.

  "Bell, what do you think is going on with the disap-

  pearances?" Liz asked.

  Liz watched a cloud cross Bell's face. She didn't speak

  * * *

  for a long moment, and then said, "I really don't know."

 
Then she paused again and said, "There have been

  about a dozen in the last three months."

  "About?" Liz asked. "Doesn't anybody know exactly

  how many?"

  "Well, people don't need a reason to leave this town, a

  hole-in-the-wall with few jobs anymore. And a lot of people

  have taken off in the middle of the night over the years.

  Sometimes they're in trouble, running from the law or their

  beau. Sometimes they're looking for something that they

  won't find in Stonewall. And sometimes they don't leave a

  forwarding address."

  "So some are missing and some are escapees?' Maria asked.

  Bell gave them a thin smile and said, "Probably."

  That didn't explain all of it, though, Liz knew. And it

  definitely didn't explain her vision of Jimmy's future.

  "In the last three months, how many of the people who

  have 'left town' have been guys?" Liz asked.

  "None," Bell admitted.

  "What do the police say?" Max asked. Liz could sense

  that Max didn't approve of her interest in the town's

  strange business, but she was glad that he was helping.

  There was silence from Bell for a moment, and then she

  said, "The sheriff was one of the first ones gone. She disap-

  peared, and no one has heard from her since."

  A chill ran down Liz's spine as she remembered the

  room that wasn't a room and the screams. She was sud-

  denly sure that no one would be hearing from the sheriff

  ever again.

  "The state police don't believe what they're hearing.

  They think the girls just ran off," Bell said.

  * * *

  "Jimmy said that a few girls turned up later," Liz said.

  Bell nodded. "Three more that we thought were miss-

  ing turned up five days later. They were pretty shook up

  and didn't remember anything about where they had

  been. The doctors couldn't find anything wrong with any

  of them."

  Liz didn't want to ask her next question, but she

  couldn't back down now. "How long has Jimmy's sister

  been gone?" she asked anxiously.

  "Seven days today," Bell said.

  The entire table was silent. To Liz's surprise, it was Sam

  who broke the silence. "She was a nice girl," he said, and

  then went back to his food.

 

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