She answers swiftly, “This is what you wanted.”
I blurt out the first thing that comes to mind: “Are you a wizard?”
Pilot’s gaze whips over to me. He looks angry again. Why is he angry at me?
“Rewrite your past,” says the woman.
“What do you mean? Are you saying this is real? We’re in two thousand fucking eleven?” Pilot
demands.
“
Deathly Hallows Part Two
hasn’t been released yet,” I add.
“You had no right to do that!” Pilot yells.
“There’s a reset option if you so desire.” She smiles at him.
“What?” He juts his head forward toward her for emphasis.
Airplane Lady/Starbucks barista/waitress/spirit guide continues calmly, “If
in three days you
don’t want to continue down this path, a reset button can be found during your Rome venture.”
“And Miley Cyrus hasn’t released ‘Wrecking Ball,’” I say.
“What do you mean, a reset button?” Pilot inquires skeptically.
She folds her hands together. “A portable button. If you choose to push it, you’ll go back to the
elevator. This opportunity will be lost and forgotten.”
I swallow hard. “That sounds awfully magical. Is this magic or is this science?”
“It is what you make it.” She smiles again.
“Where will the button be?” Pilot demands.
“It will be placed in Rome this weekend.”
“But where?”
“You’ll have to find it.”
“Like a treasure hunt?” I sound like a curious seven-year-old asking her parents a question.
“We’ll have to find it? Are you kidding? What is this, a game to you?”
“Have fun on your journey.” She leans over to pick up our check and some cash that Pilot must
have thrown on the table when I went running after her.
I catch her hand, placing my own over it. “Wait, will you be here to talk when we need you?
Are you going to disappear in a minute? Are you technically our spirit guide?”
She heaves a great breath and looks me straight in the eyes. “Child, this isn’t a film; this is
reality.”
Chills run down my spine. She pulls her hand out from under mine and walks away.
“That’s not an answer at all!” I yell after her. I make to jump from my seat, but I can’t get up.
It’s like I’m glued down. My ass is stuck. The chair won’t move. I’m stuck. I yank and squirm.
Pilot tries
to leap from his own seat, but it would appear he’s found himself in a similar
situation.
“What the hell?” he blurts.
We watch helplessly as she disappears into what I can only assume is the kitchen at the back of
the restaurant. And then I fall sideways from my chair onto the cold tile floor, and Pilot flies up to
his feet.
He breezes by me toward the kitchen. I scramble off the floor,
my knees burning from the
impact of the tile, and hurry after him. The whole restaurant gapes at us.
Pilot charges through the kitchen door, and I’m in there with him a second later.
Burgers sizzle on a giant grill a few feet away and a dark-haired
man in his thirties stands
behind it. A few other people bustle about chopping vegetables and preparing salads. Our spirit
guide is nowhere to be seen.
“This is exactly what would happen in a film. What a load of bullshit,” I growl.
Grill Man looks up with a confused expression. “What are you two doing back here?”
“S-sorry, we thought we…” I stutter, “um, and so we came to look, but—”
“You have to get out of here,” Grill Man scolds.
Pilot shakes his head that way you do when you’re having an argument with someone who’s
being ridiculous, and you can’t deal with them anymore so you just
shake your head and turn
away. Pilot’s mad, but I can’t help but feel a trickle of excitement. He pivots out of the kitchen,
and I follow at his heels.
“Pilot,” I start as we descend the steps at the center of the room.
“Shane, I can’t talk right now.”
“But—”
A waiter up ahead is saying things to us. I’m too distracted to listen or respond. We barrel past
him, toward the door, and back out onto the sidewalk. It’s a nice night. Pilot heads in the direction
of the Karlston with his hands stuffed in his pockets. He keeps his gaze focused straight ahead. I
have to power walk to keep pace with him.
My mind spins back to our first night here: the grocery store, there’s no food in the kitchen.
That almost kiss. The Flat Three Taboo game we initiated.
I speak up as we round the block toward fancy-white-house lane, “Pies, we’re going back to a
kitchen with no food. Maybe we should grab something little, at least to have as a snack during the
flat bonding game? If everything’s the same as before, I should have a bunch of British cash in my
purse that my mom gave me right before she dropped me at the airport. I can pay you back ASAP.”
“I can’t.”
He doesn’t turn to look at me. He keeps on toward the Karlston, walking even faster now. I
stop moving and stare at his back as he gets farther and farther away.
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