GIVE HIM THAT THE GOOD LORD HAD
NOT GENEROUSLY BESTOWED? THE
BOY WAS SIMPLY AWESOME!
When the NERDS used the ball pit to return to the present, they agreed that they needed to keep their end of the wormhole open no matter what, just in case Agent Brand made it back. They closed all the other ball pits out in history, and Heathcliff adjusted the facial recognition software on the Playground computers in hopes of spotting their boss somewhere in time. But it gave them no word of Brand or Ms. Holiday.
Still, there was good news. The present the children came back to was changed for the better. The Playground was no longer buried under concrete. President Lipton had never been arrested and the NERDS organization was still a national secret.
Ruby hoped she would find things at home altered, too. As she walked toward her house, her palms began to itch. She was allergic to uncertainty. What would she find beyond that door?
“Get in here out of the cold,” her mother said, opening the door before she could even knock.
“Good news, sweetpea,” her father said when she came through the door. “We found a hotel for everyone.”
“And it’s got a pool,” Cousin Finn cheered as he raced into the hall.
The rest of the family followed. They were all there! Every single one!
“We’ll be out of your hair in no time,” Aunt Laura said.
“This hotel better have an elevator,” Grandpa Saul said.
“Of course it has an elevator. What hotel doesn’t have an elevator?” Grandpa Tom cried.
Predictably, a huge spat broke out with everyone bickering and talking at the same time.
“I’m going to order everything on the room service menu,” Cousin Imogen said.
“Don’t go,” Ruby said.
“Huh?” her parents said simultaneously.
“I want you to stay,” Ruby said.
“But sweetie, you’re gonna have to sleep on top of the dryer,” Grandma Rose said.
“No place I’d rather be. You’re my family. As much as you fight, it’s a miracle we can all stand to be in the same room together. I want that miracle for this holiday.”
“I call the bathtub!” said Grandma Tina.
That night, when everyone had found a space on the floor to sleep, Ruby caught the news. The lead story was that President Lipton had announced that he wasn’t going to run for a second term. They cut to a press conference with him and his family. Tessa stood next to her mom, smiling.
“Being the president of this great nation has been a wonderful experience and a huge responsibility. I think we’ve gotten a lot done in the past three years, but that work has come at the expense of my family. Someone told me once that family has to come first, and she was right. So tonight I’m announcing that I will not seek a second term. I always wanted to be the president. I dreamed of serving this country. I imagined it was the best job in the world, but I already had the best job in the world.”
Lipton took his wife and daughter in his arms and hugged them both as reporters charged forward with cameras and questions.
Ruby smiled. She and her team would have to keep a close eye on Tessa. She had upgrades and a nuclear-powered time machine, but Ruby hoped that the soon-to-be former First Daughter would no longer need it—or her second face.
The next day, Heathcliff and Jackson walked to Heathcliff ’s parents’ house.
“What if it doesn’t work?” he asked. “The upgrades didn’t exactly tell me how the nanobytes would get my family back.”
“Then they’ll just think you’re some weird kid, and we’ll go back to the drawing board,” Jackson said. “Do you want me to go in with you?”
He shook his head.
“All right, Agent Hodges, good luck.”
“‘Agent’?”
“Ruby told me to tell you. She’s going to need all the help she can get managing all the new recruits,” he said. “Now get going. Oh, and good luck, buddy.”
Heathcliff smiled. “Thanks … buddy.”
He raced up the sidewalk and threw open the front door.
“Mom! Dad!” he cried.
His mother was the first to appear. “Who in heavens are you?”
“Mom, it’s me—Heathcliff. I’m home!”
“Thomas! Thomas, there’s a strange kid breaking into our house,” she cried.
Thomas came into view. He had a golf club in his hands and he was holding it threateningly. “Get out of our house!”
“Dad! Don’t you know me?” Heathcliff asked.
“I’m calling the police,” his mother said. She took out her phone and called 911. “If you don’t want any more trouble, I’d leave right now.”
Had the machine fooled him? Was it one of those super-dumb lessons he was supposed to learn? Like at the end of a book, when the fairy appears and tells him he had all the power he ever needed inside of him. That would be pretty lame, and he’d end up getting arrested.
“There’s the siren,” his father said.
Heathcliff panicked. They were going to take him away and his family would never know who he was. No! He couldn’t let it end like that. They might not know him, but he needed them to know he was sorry for all the things he had done and that they were great parents and that all his mistakes had nothing to do with them. He needed them to know that their boy loved them dearly.
So he gave them a hug. His mom resisted at first, and his dad tried to shove him off, but Heathcliff hung on. He held the hug as long as possible.
He was still hugging them when the police came. They pulled him away and dragged him out to their car. They locked him in the backseat and went inside to talk to his parents. He was in big trouble, but he didn’t care. Those hugs had felt good. He’d do it all over again in a second. Whatever they did to him, he would have those hugs.
A police officer returned with his parents in tow. He opened the car door and peered inside.
“Kid, get out of the car.”
Heathcliff was confused but did as he was told. “Officer, I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to scare these people. I just—”
“Heathcliff, shouldn’t you be in school?” his mother asked.
“You called me Heathcliff!”
“Of course she did. That’s your name,” his father replied. “Are you feeling OK, son?”
“You called me ‘son’!”
“Folks, what is going on?” the policeman asked. “I was called here for a breaking and entering.”
“You must have the wrong house, officer,” his mother said. “This is our son. He’s in the sixth grade at Knowlton Middle School—though we have no idea why he’s not there.”
“I just missed you two. I wanted to come home,” he said, and then he hugged them again.
Agent Brand stood in the teeth-chattering air outside a gas station in Novosibirsk, Siberia. A black car pulled up. He set down his oboe and eyed the car closely.
It was them.
He stood behind a trash barrel and waited. A tough, grizzled gangster got out of the car. Lars Corsica. Then the passenger-side door opened and a young woman stepped out. She was probably seventeen—just a kid, but blond and beautiful. It was her. He’d recognize that smile anywhere.
“First we get gas,” Lars grunted in Russian. “Then we get married.”
“Married?” the girl asked. There was uncertainty in her voice.
“Unless you want to go back home to your abusive parents?”
She shook her head.
“Then wait in the car.”
The girl did as she was told, and Lars approached the gas station.