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CHAPTER 4<br />

1<br />

Al let me help him into his bedroom, and even muttered “Thanks, buddy” when I knelt to unlace his<br />

shoes and pull them off. He only balked when I offered to help him into the bathroom.<br />

“Making the world a better place is important, but so is being able to get to the john under your<br />

own power.”<br />

“Just as long as you’re sure you can make it.”<br />

“I’m sure I can tonight, and I’ll worry about tomorrow tomorrow. Go home, Jake. Start reading the<br />

notebook—there’s a lot there. Sleep on it. Come see me in the morning and tell me what you decided.<br />

I’ll still be here.”<br />

“Ninety-five percent probability?”<br />

“At least ninety-seven. On the whole, I’m feeling pretty chipper. I wasn’t sure I’d even get this far<br />

with you. Just telling it—and having you believe it—is a load off my mind.”<br />

I wasn’t sure I did believe it, even after my adventure that afternoon, but I didn’t say so. I told him<br />

goodnight, reminded him not to lose count of his pills (“Yeah, yeah”), and left. I stood outside<br />

looking at the gnome with his Lone Star flag for a minute before going down the walk to my car.<br />

Don’t mess with Texas, I thought . . . but maybe I was going to. And given Al’s difficulties with<br />

changing the past—the blown tires, the blown engine, the collapsed bridge—I had an idea that if I<br />

went ahead, Texas was going to mess with me.<br />

2<br />

After all that, I didn’t think I’d be able to get to sleep before two or three in the morning, and there<br />

was a fair likelihood that I wouldn’t be able to get to sleep at all. But sometimes the body asserts its<br />

own imperatives. By the time I got home and fixed myself a weak drink (being able to have liquor in<br />

the house again was one of several small pluses in my return to the single state), I was heavy-eyed; by<br />

the time I had finished the scotch and read the first nine or ten pages of Al’s Oswald Book, I could<br />

barely keep them open.<br />

I rinsed my glass in the sink, went into the bedroom (leaving a trail of clothes behind me as I<br />

walked, a thing Christy would have given me hell about), and fell onto the double bed where I now<br />

slept single. I thought about reaching over to turn off the bedside lamp, but my arm felt heavy, heavy.<br />

Correcting honors essays in the strangely quiet teachers’ room now seemed like something that had<br />

happened a very long time ago. Nor was that strange; everyone knows that, for such an unforgiving<br />

thing, time is uniquely malleable.<br />

I crippled that girl. Put her back in a wheelchair.<br />

When you went down those steps from the pantry this afternoon, you didn’t even know who Carolyn Poulin<br />

was, so don’t be an ass. Besides, maybe somewhere she’s still walking. Maybe going through that hole creates<br />

alternate realities, or time-streams, or some damn thing.<br />

Carolyn Poulin, sitting in her wheelchair and getting her diploma. Back in the year when “Hang<br />

On Sloopy” by the McCoys was top of the pops.<br />

Carolyn Poulin, walking through her garden of daylilies in 1979, when “Y.M.C.A.” by the Village

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