“Not just
So what … this was a clue? No Mirror in the background that she could see. Perhaps one of Dickens’s own books was important? Or a character? Well, hell if she knew, and they had bigger problems.
But she’d also noticed something else: no radio in that library, or anywhere. In fact, she hadn’t heard that scratchy static-filled broadcast about murders since she’d pulled the others into House. Didn’t know what to think about that either, or why that broadcast, so constant across situations—whether it was with Lily or in House, or way back, down cellar—had dogged her in the first place.
“
“We don’t
She knew what Bode was saying. The effect was jarring, a mental hitch, like blundering over an exposed root. The paper she’d written for the Jane Austen unit in English last year was torture, like analyzing a weird, alien twin. “This is different, Bode. You must feel it, even if you don’t want to believe it. What other explanation is there? And don’t say drugs or you’re drunk or something. This would have to be the most detailed bad trip of all time, and you know it.”
“I don’t know anything, and neither do you. You’re spouting theories.” Bode’s jaw set. “Point is
“I don’t know. We didn’t go over
“Where you said you and Chad were this morning,” Eric put in.
“And still could be now,” Bode said.
“No,” Lizzie said. “We’re not anywhere, really, or any-when.”
“What does that mean, Lizzie?” Rima asked, at the same time that Bode rolled his eyes and drawled, “Oh yeah, that’s
God, the way certain things kept repeating and echoing was starting to weird her out. “What about this?” Flipping the book over, Emma quickly jumped her gaze from that black-and-white photo to the blurb. She doubted any scaly-armed monsters would suddenly corkscrew free, but you couldn’t be too careful. “The blurb
“Black echoes?” Casey asked.
“VC tunnels.” When Casey looked blank, Bode amplified. “Vietcong?”
“Who?”
“Guerrilla force for the North Vietnamese Army,” Eric said. “It’s, like, ancient history.”
“Not to me. Echo Sector’s lousy with tunnels. Blacker than pitch,” Bode said. “Just like on the cover.”
“You
“Get shot if you use a flashlight.”
“Yeah, tunnel rats,” Eric said. “I read about you guys.”
“That’s us. Dropping into a black echo’s the only way to kill Charlie before he kills us.” Bode’s tone was matter-of-fact. “Look, for the sake of argument, let’s say you’re right. Well, why can’t that book be from one of those … those universe things? Like
“Well—” Emma began, and stopped. That all these books existed in an alternative timeline had never occurred to her.
“Ah.
“It’s not a contest,” she said, although she felt as if she’d lost a point. Why hadn’t she considered that? Bode was absolutely …