Note: The characters of Jarod, Sydney, Miss Parker, Mr. Lyle and Sam the Sweeper are property of TNT and whoever else owns them since it's not me. Jillian belongs to me since she's my character. I just re-uploaded the story because I read it and saw how many errors there were. How embarressing!
It wasn't the best place
he'd ever slept in. Wallpaper that was peeling from the walls, carpet that was
stained to a dingy gray and yellow stains on the roof from chain-smokers. But
he would gladly take this dirty, cramped room over the Centre any day. Especially
now. They had taken away too many people that he cared about. His family. Everyone.
The journal and the letters,
that lay scattered over his bed, were all that remained of her now. Jillian.
He wiped his tears away. Just
when he had found someone else who truly understood him, and what it meant to
be a Pretender, they had taken her away. Why couldn't they just leave him
alone? Leave his family, his friends, and the people he cared about, alone?
Couldn't they see they were slowly killing him? Didn't they even care?
He knew the answers. Had been
over them thousands of times. Frankly, he was amazed he had held onto his
sanity as long as he had. Sometimes, when he was alone, he felt as if it was
draining away from him. He just didn't know where his pretending stopped, and
the real him began. He still wasn't sure who the
"real" him was, and Jillian had understood that. Understood his need
to help people. She knew him better than he did.
And she was gone.
He picked up the first letter
she'd written, and began reading it over again.
Dear Jarod,
Perhaps one day you will
read this letter. Perhaps I will even meet you. We are two of a kind Jarod. Both of us Pretenders. I am beginning to understand you.
I've watched the DSA's of your life up to the
mid-seventies. It seems your life was mine. It was like deja-vu,
seeing you, almost like reliving my life through your eyes.
Our Simulations were different, but our life,
lives, they're the same. I feel I am connected to you, in a way I've never
experienced before. And I wish you knew me as I am coming to know you. I
understand you.
Jarod, they want me to
bring you in. Pretend to be you, and find you. Maybe then we can get to know
each other. Will you be angry if I helped Miss Parker capture you? Would you
come to hate me? I don't want that, but I do want to know you. Is that wrong?
Selfish? If you were here now, I would know for sure. But you're not, you're
helping people. Maybe someday you will help me, or maybe I can help you.
I must go now, sweepers are
coming.
Jillian
As Jarod read the letters,
his mind began piecing together the events that had lead up to his recent
capture. He closed his eyes, the letters forgotten for the time being, as he
relived Jillian's last pretend.
She was sitting there in that upholstered
chair, nervous.
What do they
want with me?
Mr. Lyle
walked into the room, his office. She wanted to run, hide, get away this man
who was dressed in some italian designer suit, his hair, nails, and every other
detail, perfect. It scared her, his need to control, to have things his way.
Even his smile was perfect.
"Hello
Jillian." His voice was pleasant, friendly. Perfect.
"Hello."
Her throat was dry, her voice scratchy.
He sat down. She
glanced around, the office was too perfect. Everything was perfect. It
made her shiver in fear because she knew when things were not perfect, Mr. Lyle
became Bobby Bowman, that scared little boy who had to get away from his
step-father's control. He had expected Bobby to be perfect. But Bobby wasn't
perfect, never could be. Only Mr. Lyle was perfect.
"I'll bet
you're wondering why you're here." Mr. Lyle said, after offering her a
drink, which she declined.
"You want
me to use my Pretender skills to do something for you Mr. Lyle." She told
him bluntly. She wanted this over with as soon as possible.
Lyle chuckled,
"Very good Jillian." His smile quickly faded, "There's a man,
and his name is Jarod. I want you to find him, help us capture him. When he's
here, safe at the Centre, we'll allow you to leave. We'll even take you
wherever you like."
Her eyes
widened. It was too good to be true. She wanted so badly to believe it. There
was a possibility they would allow it. There was always a chance. She had
tasted, felt, smelled freedom, now she wanted to actually experience it.
"All
right." She whispered.
"Good. Here are the
details." He slid a large manila folder across his desk to her, "You
will be given access to DSA's that contain his life
here at the Centre. If you need anything, don't hesitate to ask." Then he
dismissed her with a flick of his maimed hand, she grabbed the folder, and
stood. Two sweepers escorted her back to her quarters.
She was sitting in her
room, going through the file on Jarod. However, she didn't trust the
"official" files on Jarod. On anyone else for that matter. It was all
too neat. Too perfect. How did they expect her to run a proper
simulation when her facts were incorrect? She needed the truth. All of it.
She asked one of the sweepers
who were guarding (guarding what? Her? Did they think she would run away like
Jarod did?) her door to tell Mr. Lyle she needed to speak with him. It was
important. That was the night that she wrote her first letter to Jarod. She
also began her journal. Her records of how this Simulation was progressing. It
was all kept in a purple notebook. It was sometime in the early hours in the
morning before she drifted off into an exhausted sleep. All of Jarod's files
cluttered her bed.
Exhaustion caught up with
him. He fell asleep and dreamed of a young woman in her mid-thirties. Her hair
was long, brown and curly. She had green eyes that never seemed to laugh or
smile.
She kept
telling him that she was sorry. Tears streamed down her face.
"I'm sorry
Jarod. So very sorry." She whispered it over and
over until Jarod awoke from his troubled dreams.
"So am I
Jillian. So am I."
She had gone
over everything, until she knew it all by heart, everything about him. She had
studied his picture until she had memorized every wrinkle, laugh line, every
part of his face.
She wrote
another letter to him that night. It was the third one she'd written.
Dear Jarod,
I know
everything now. Mr. Lyle gave me access to files that would drive anyone else
to insomnia and paranoia. I know things about you and everyone else. Things
people would try to forget, but would haunt them in their nightmares. I know,
because they haunt mine.
I know
everything about you, things you probably wouldn't remember. This Sim is getting too personal. Everyday I study you. I think
I am becoming obsessed with you. Mr. Lyle makes me eat, sleep, drink you, and I
cannot escape you, or what is happening to me. You are constantly in my head, I
am becoming you. And I can't stop this, it's too late now.
Has any
Pretender ever tried to actually become another Pretender? I don't think it's
safe. Look at Angelo. He's a vegetable, but he has to be. He has an incredible
gift of becoming anyone, even a Pretender, yet his emotions are locked away.
Pretending to be a Pretender isn't safe, can't be. We can feel everyone's
emotions; it's almost like sensory overload. I'm not sure I will survive this
Simulation.
Am I making
any sense? I fear I've lost my objectivity along with my sanity. They're
dangling a bone before my eyes Jarod, knowing I am starving. They don't care,
they never have. They want to know where you are, and I cannot hold back
forever. They know my fears. They instilled them in me. Eventually they will
find out where you are, even if I don't want to tell them.
Please
forgive me Jarod for what they are making me do, for what I've done. Perhaps,
they will actually give me my freedom. There is a chance they will really let
me leave.
I think I am
falling in love with you Jarod. Isn't that crazy? But it's true. I don't even
know you personally, but I love you anyway. I HAVE gone crazy.
I'm so sorry,
Jillian
She didn't
want to do it. She lied, begged, and finally when she could no longer stand it,
stand the terror, she'd given in. She told them exactly where Jarod was hiding
at the moment. What he was doing there, everything.
"Good girl
Jillian." It was empty praise.
"What
about my freedom?" She whispered, knowing, yet praying.
"What
about it? Did you actually think we would allow you to leave the Centre and
compromise everything that we've worked so hard to accomplish? You are very
foolish Jillian to have so blindly trusted a promise of freedom. You will never
leave the Centre. Never."
"What have
I done?" She whispered, tears rolling freely down her pale cheeks.
"What have I done to you Jarod? What have I done?" She whispered
again and again as the sweepers took her back to her room. She lay on her floor
for hours afterwards, crying, and praying for forgiveness from a man who didn't
even know she existed.
"Oh Jarod,
please forgive me."
When Miss Parker and Mr. Lyle finally dragged Jarod in, Jillian saw it. Saw the wild, crazed look in his eyes. Knew she had done a terrible thing to this man. Fresh waves of guilt assaulted her, and she knew that no matter what, she would free Jarod from this place. Soon.
Dear Jarod,
I saw
you. They brought you in, and I saw you for the very first time. I pray you
will forgive me for what I've done. I never meant to hurt you.
The Centre,
Mr. Lyle, Miss Parker, they will never let us go Jarod. Neither
of us. Do you want to know why? Because the Centre is like flypaper, and
you and me Jarod, are the flies. Once you're caught, you struggle all your life
for freedom, then you finally die from exhaustion. If you're lucky enough to
escape, you're no longer whole. There are pieces of you missing, left behind.
Tokens for the Centre.
They will
always have us Jarod. But I can help you get free. I won't allow them to keep
you any longer, like some prized, trophy fly they've captured. I am going to
free you, Jarod. Soon you will be free to fly again. This Flypaper Centre won't
keep you this time.
Forgive me,
Jillian
You could
hear his hoarse screaming echoing in the lonely halls of SL-26. It grated on
her nerves, reminding her that she was responsible for his being there.
She stopped
before his door and two sweepers, Miss Parker's most trusted, stood guard. Sam
and the one whose name she hadn't caught yet.
Sam was eyeing
her skeptically when he asked, "Who are you?"
"I'm Susan
Watkins. Dr. Susan Watkins." She waited, giving the two sweepers a look
that clearly said that should mean something to them.
"That
means exactly what to me?" Sam asked.
She sighed
patiently, "Listen, Miss Parker told me to sedate your prisoner and take
him up to SL-19 for testing. I don't know how often you disobey Miss Parker's
orders, but I try to stay on her good side." She raised an eyebrow; her
tone indicated the two sweeper's sanity was being questioned.
"Look! I
don't have time to stand here having a staring contest with you two, if I don't
get that man up to SL-19 soon, Miss Parker and Mr. Lyle will skin us all
alive."
"All
right, Dr. Watkins." Sam sighed; he opened the door for her, allowed her
to enter, and followed her inside the room, making sure to close the door
behind him.
Jarod was being
heavily restrained in what looked like an alien birthing table. She badly
wanted to tell him she was there to help, but could not with Sam breathing down
her neck.
"Hurry up,
Doctor." Sam urged.
She nodded, walked over to Jarod, whose dark eyes watched
her every move. She pulled out a hypodermic needle filled with a clear liquid
and injected it in Jarod's right arm; he cringed, and then glared at her.
"It should
take a few minutes to take effect." She stood back to wait.
"What did
you give me?" His voice was low, almost a growl, and his eyes were bleak,
empty. She realized that if he stayed in the Centre, he would die. At least his
spirit would.
"Sugar water." She answered him. Both Jarod and
Sam looked confused a moment.
She walked over
to Sam, who had finally concluded she had been joking with Jarod, and she stuck
a needle in his left shoulder. His eyes widened as he collapsed to the ground,
and went unconscious.
She glanced
heavenward, mumbling something, then at Jarod, gave him a brief smile and
called for the other sweeper to help her with his fallen companion. He soon
joined Sam in a heap on the floor, and she heaved a sigh of relief.
"Who are
you?" Jarod asked, he seemed leery of her,
afraid.
"A
Pretender, Jarod. Like you." She told him softly. "I'm here to rescue
you."
"How do I
know you're telling the truth?" The suspicion was still there, accusing
her, and she did not blame him at all.
"Because I
am responsible for you being here. I found you Jarod, and told Mr. Lyle where
you were." Her voice, her eyes were so sad, so pain filled, Jarod knew
then he could trust her. He knew how to read people, and she was not acting,
she was for real.
"What's
your name?"
"Jillian."
"Let's get
out of here, Jillian."
Her smile was
beautiful, if not still sad. She freed him from his restraints and then told
him to lay on the gurney that stood in the corner of the darkened room. He lay
down, and she strapped him in.
"Close
your eyes, Jarod." He did as she bid him, and she wheeled him out of that
room, and out of the Centre.
How had they
found them? And so quickly! They had escaped less than forty-eight hours ago.
How had they tracked them this fast? Jarod wasn't prepared for this. For anything.
In fact, Jarod
was still reeling from everything he had learned from Jillian. She knew who was
behind most of the supposed "accident" at the Centre. Like Sydney and
Jacob's car accident and Catherine Parker's "suicide". She knew it
all. She had told him all. He was glad to know that his father had not been
involved in Miss Parker's mother's death. She knew more than he had wanted to
know, but needed to know for his survival.
Jarod couldn't
believe how well she understood him. Part of him, the sensible part, knew that
her Pretender skills and her studying his history was the reason for it, the
other part of him, the part that had longed for a companion, had never truly
grown up, was awed over her understanding.
Now sweepers,
four to be exact, surrounded them outside their motel room. Their car was only
a few yards away. So close. And Jarod couldn't think. How would they get out of
this situation? His mind was fuzzy, his thinking processes, usually so
analytical, were slow and muddled. What was wrong with him?
Jillian however
had already come up with a solution. Before anyone could stop her, or guess
what she was doing, she had lunged at one of the sweepers and grabbed his gun
from his hand. She then grabbed Jarod and pointed the gun at his head.
"What are
you doing Jillian?" Jarod murmured, clearly very surprised.
"Trust
me." She whispered, then addressed Mr. Lyle, Miss Parker and the three
sweepers with guns remaining. "I'll kill him and myself if you don't leave
us be." Her voice had grown cold, sharp. It chilled Jarod to the core of
his being, even though he knew she pretended.
"Surely
you would not do such a thing Jillian." Mr. Lyle was calling her on her
bluff.
"I don't
believe you have any idea what a Pretender is capable of Mr. Lyle, given the
right surroundings and situation." Jillian answered coldly.
"Please,
be my guest and enlighten us my dear." Lyle seemed casual, but his eyes
were cold and hard.
"We won't
go back to the Centre. We'd rather die first." It was a bold statement,
everyone, including Lyle seemed shocked momentarily. "Besides, Jarod is
worth more than I am, and don't think I won't use him to get what I want
Lyle." She paused, and then gave Lyle a piercing look, "All I'd have
to do is pretend to be you."
Jarod glanced
around; everyone seemed to be wary of Jillian now. Almost afraid. Could her
crazy scheme be working? They didn't seem to know how to handle this.
"I don't
believe you could kill Jarod, Jillian. It's just not in you." Lyle's voice
was starting to show his strain.
"I
wouldn't have to kill him Lyle, just make him useless to you. What good is a
Pretender in a coma?" Her voice was harsh, determined, as unlike the Jillian
Jarod had come to know. He couldn't help but wonder if perhaps she was
pretending to be Miss Parker.
Lyle knew he
had come to a stalemate. Jillian looked unstable. He didn't know if she would
or could put a bullet in Jarod. But he didn't want to find out. There would be
other days to bring them both in. Alive and conscious.
He sighed, defeated this time. "All right, let them go."
"What?!" Miss Parker hissed; she looked pissed.
She had, until this moment, been uncharacteristically quiet. Now she was going
to take charge, and bring Wonder-Boy and his new girlfriend in.
However, Lyle
grabbed Miss Parker's arm and whispered something in her ear. She glared at
him, but remained silent. Lyle turned back to Jarod and Jillian.
"Leave."
"Walk
backwards with me Jarod, and when I say so, turn and run for the car."
Jarod nodded.
They began
walking awkwardly. Shuffling backwards in a lurching sort of fashion, and when
Jillian muttered "Now," they both turned and ran. A shot rang out
however, Jarod ducked, and out of the corner of his eye, he saw Jillian fall.
"NOOooo!" He screamed, turning to see Jillian
lying on the pavement, blood spewing forth, soaking her clothing. It barely
registered in his brain that Miss Parker had backhanded one of the sweepers,
whose gun went flying. The gun that had shot Jillian. Jarod was too busy
scooping up her limp body and running to the car.
"Jarod
stop!" Miss Parker called, her feet pounding the pavement, making an
effort to catch up to her prey. Jarod did not even see Miss Parker, who was
pointing her gun at his car, firing shots, trying to blow his tire out. He
didn't see sweepers trying to run after his car, or even where he was going.
All he knew was that he had to get Jillian to a hospital, had to save her.
"Hang on
Jillian," Jarod whispered, His knuckles were white, he gripped the
steering wheel so hard.
"Jarod?"
It was a soft moan that came from Jillian. She was lying in the passenger's
seat of the car, her blood soaking the upholstery, it was everywhere.
"I'm here
Jill." Jarod assured her. "I'm going to get you to a hospital, so
don't you worry about anything."
"No."
It was a strangled cry. Her voice was very low and soft, a mere breathy
whisper.
"What?"
Jarod wasn't thinking clearly, couldn't with Jillian laying, bleeding to death
before his eyes.
"That's where
they'll expect you to go, Jarod. They'll be waiting for us there, or will
arrive shortly after." She was gasping for air by now, "You have to
keep driving. For your sake as much as my own."
"You'll
die if I don't get you to a hospital soon." He was desperate now, his eyes
constantly scanning for that blue sign that would tell him where a hospital
would be. "I can't just keep going, knowing you are dying, lying in a pool
of your own blood." Tears blinded him, this wasn't happening to him.
"You have
no choice." Gasp, "What I told Lyle was true. I would rather die free
Jarod, than live at the Centre. I won't go back." She was coughing blood
now, wheezing for air.
"But..."
It was unthinkable; he didn't want to do it even as he passed the hospital.
"Please
don't argue with me Jarod." Gasp, "I don't have the strength. This is
my wish, my choice."
"I can't
Jill..."
She coughed, her body
convulsed with the violence of the fit. "In the trunk, there's a purple
notebook." Cough, gasp, "Some letters too." Wheeze, "I love
you Jarod." Choke, "Remember... to... fly... for me." She
inhaled one last, wheezy gasp, her body relaxed and her breath escaped along
with her soul.
Jarod's eyes
and head ached. When was the last time he'd cried so much? Maybe
never. He'd only had a brief time with Jillian, but he wanted more. He
wanted to know her, everything about her as she had known him. He wouldn't know
now. Because she was gone. Forever.
Jarod picked up
Jillian's notebook and inhaled its scent. It was part of all the remained of
her. A piece of folded paper fell to the bed where Jarod lay, sprawled.
Frowning, he picked it up and unfolded it.
It was another
letter. From Jillian.
Dear Jarod,
I write
this as I watch you sleep so peacefully. I never knew what ice cream tasted
like until now, or pez. You've shown me what freedom truly tastes like. Twinkies,
and ice cream, and pez. That's the taste of freedom.
But more
importantly Jarod, you have taught me something. You have taught me to
never give up; I look at what you've gone through, and what you've done. I see
a man who, no matter personal cost, no matter how dangerous, is willing to help
others, show them compassion, give them love.
You are
truly beautiful Jarod. I have seen the world through your eyes; your
intelligence and your innocence have touched my soul.
I know I
love you Jarod, you are my kindred spirit, my best friend. I am glad that some
good came from your capture, I got to meet you. I am sorry you were hurt
though. I was being very selfish.
Remember to
spread your wings Jarod, and fly. Not like a fly, but like an eagle. Be free
and soar. You are a butterfly, flying free and free to fly.
Fly for me Jarod, fly for yourself.
Love Always,
Jillian
