Sam stood up from the table.
âWhere are you going?â She asked.
Sam shrugged and smiled meekly. âYou knowâŚI donât really know.â
Bethâs eyes washed across the small quaint kitchen.
âI could make you something to eat.â She suggested.
Sam gazed down at the floor thoughtfully. âI donât think Iâm very hungry.â
There was a moment of awkward silence, and then Sam, began to head for the door.
âYou know,â he said, looking up into Bethâs bright eyes, âI think it might finally be time for me to go home.â
Beth smiled and a tear spilled from her left eye, âThat sounds nice.â She said, and briskly wiped it away.
âWhy are you crying?â Sam asked.
Beth gave an embarrassed giggle. âI donât know.â She shrugged.
Sam took a deep breath. He felt completely positive that if he focused his energy, he could make the leap home right now. No, not here. He thought. I want it to be outside.
This caused a laugh to climb up to the back of his throat. His mind was filled with the sudden absurdity of the previous thought. What in the world did it matter if he took the leap here in Alâs kitchen or if he took it outside? Beth had seen his facial expression change and herâs did likewise.
âWhat is it?â She asked.
Sam shrugged again and took a step toward the door. âI think I just need some air.â
Beth nodded and smiled. âAir sounds nice.â
She followed Sam to the front door, which he opened, and then he pushed open a metal screen door. The hinges protested loudly. A blast of thick swampy air hit him in the face, followed quickly by a cacophony of insect sounds.
âWhewâ Sam said, stepping out unto the porch. âItâs hot.â
Beth carefully guided the screen door closed behind her. âNot hotâ she corrected. âMuggy.â
Sam smiled and repeated the word thoughtfully. âMuggy.â
Beth leaned against a column beside the front porch steps. âYou can see the future?â She asked thoughtfully, looking up at the countless stars in the sky.
Sam followed her gaze into the celestial heavens. âSomething like that.â He replied.
Beth sighed. âSo you know when this stupid war will be over and everything is gonna go back to normal.â
Sam laughed in spite of himself.
Bethâs eyes shot down from the stars and aimed directly for him. âWhatâs so funny?â She asked.
Sam waved a hand at her. âOh nothing.â He said. âThe war will end.â He replied. âBut nothing will ever go back to the way it was.â
Beth nodded thoughtfully and bit her lip. Her gaze returned again to the stars. âNothing ever does.â She replied.
And then, Sam felt it. The tingling crawling sensation. Every atom of his body put to motion. The fiber of his being turning to light at the Quantum Level.
But NO, he thought. This was wrong, he thought. He had not directed this Leap. He had not wanted it. Something was pulling him. He was out of control again. The world turned to white and he felt his existence shifting. The familiar, damnable pulling that he knew so well.
But I thought I had mastered it, he thought. I thought I had control.
The image of the world began to burn into the white around him. Existence dissolved into form, into being. The white faded and color rushed forth around him. The tingling abided and he felt himself once again embody a shapeâa humanoid shape. He felt the gravity of his being, felt the sensations of possessing hair and skin and bones. He tasted something in his mouth, something sweet. Sweet iced tea?
His ears were assaulted by the sound of a church organ, slowly droning away. A baritone voice accompanied it, singing a hymn all to familiar to Sam, for he had often heard his mother sing it while cooking in the kitchen, back home on the farm in Elk Ridge, Indiana.
âWhen burdens press, and seem beyond endurance.
Bowed down with grief, to Him I lift my face.â
Samâs vision came into focus. He sat in some kind of living room, nothing immediately familiar to him. The walls were wood paneling, and there was a large gold rimmed clock on the wall opposite him. Directly in front of him was a large old fashioned Black and White Television with rabbit ears. A buxom woman in a flower print dress was on the grainy screen, singing into a microphone.
And then in love He brings me sweet assurance:
My child! For thee sufficient is my grace.â
Sam looked to the left and saw a Middle Aged looking gentleman sitting in a recliner, only separated from the couch by a cherry wood end table adorned with a small lamp. Steel blue eyes peered through a wrinkled face at the screen, but Sam could almost immediately tell that these eyes were not watching the screen, they were looking through it. The man was far away inside the recesses of his own mind.
Sam put his hands down on the brown leather couch and stood up. He walked over to the wall to the left of the TV and clock to where some photographs were hung in gilded frames. They were of no one he had ever seen before. He caught a glimpse of his reflection in the glass of the frames and knew at once he was no longer Sam Beckett. Sam instinctively touched his head. It came away greasy from some kind of product.
Sam looked back to the middle aged man. The manâs expression had not changed one bit. From his vantage point Sam could see down a hallway where there was an open door. From the slight view of the wall inside the room, he could tell it was probably some kind of bathroom. He headed right for it and was gratified to see that he was right. Almost as soon as he shut the door to turn around and check out himself in the mirror, movement caught his eye coming from the bathtub.
Sam looked and saw the hologram of his friend. His partner. The man whom he had shared so many of his journeys through time. Al Calavicci stood beside him. He wore an offensively bright Hawaiian t-shirt, and the hand that held the Handlink device also held his trademark cigar. His face was worn and haggardâfull of concern.
âDammit Sam! Where the hell have you been?â Al asked.
âWhat do you mean?â Sam replied, âWhere the hell am I?â
âZiggyâs been trying to find you for over thirty six hours and we had nobody in the imaging chamber. We thought you were gone!â Al said, chewing his cigar.
Sam looked at himself in the mirror. He was inhabiting the body of a young man, High School age, perhaps 16 or 17. He was handsome, strong jawline, and wore his hair back in some kind of 50s Greaser Style. He wore a white t-shirt with suspenders and gray slacks. Sam blinked and shook his head, not wanting to believe it.
âI was just in your living room, Al. I was just with Beth. I was telling herâŚâ
Alâs face tightened. âWith Beth?â He asked. âWhat the hell are you talking about that you were with Beth?â
âI was with Beth.â Sam repeated. âI could control my own leaps. I was in my own body. It was me. It was my birthday.â
Al frowned. âYou must have been dreaming,â he said and looked down at the Handlink.âYour last leap was as the young Elvis Presley in Memphis, Tennessee. You helped a young woman named Sue AnneâŚâ
âI know all that!â Sam snapped. âAfter that. After that, I leapt into myself. It was my birthday and I was back in Pennsylvania.â
Al began shaking his head but Sam persisted. âAnd you were there and you were a bartender. I came in and ordered a Shlitz.â
âA Shlitz?â Al cocked his head to one side.
âAnd all around me was everyone I had ever helped. And Gooshie was there. AndâŚStawpah.â
âStawpah?â Al repeated.
âYes, but then, you were also there. Not just you who was the bartender, but actually you.â
Al rolled his eyes. âAnd you were there, and you were there, and you were there, and Toto was there too!â He waved his hand, cigar smoke coiling around his head. âSam, canât you see that it was a dream?!â
âNo, it couldnât have been!â Sam cried out and then stopped, remembering that he was inhabiting the body of someone else, somewhere, in some strange house. It was unwise to attract attention.
Al sighed. âYouâve been MIA for a day and a half. Ziggy must be on the fritz. And now you say, that you could control your own leaps? And you went to visit my wife? Beth?!â
Sam jabbed a finger at Al, âExactly! Your wife. Only, she wasnât your wife anymore before I leaped to her. I told her you were coming back from Vietnam and to wait for you, and then sheâŚâ
Al shook his head, âWhat in the name of Jesus, Joseph, and Mary are you talking about??!â
Sam put his hands on the sink. âIt doesnât matter,â he said after a long pause. âIâm telling you, for a split second, I could control my leaps. I was tying up some loose ends, and then I was on my way home.â
âSamâ Alâs tone made Sam turn his head to look back at him. âAre you sure this wasnât a dream.â
Sam thought for a long time. Then he shrugged and sat down on the toilet. His body briefly flickered through the leg of the hologram of his friend in the close confines of the bathroom. âI guess I canât be sure.â He said finally. âBut it didnât feel like a dream. And you are married to Beth, am I right?â
Al smiled, âHappily!â
Sam shot up from the toilet, âThen it couldnât have been a dream. I did that! I fixed that!â
Al frowned, âFixed what?â
Sam waved a hand at him, âIt doesnât matter. Itâs not important. The important question is, where am I? Who am I? And why do I no longer have control?â
Al looked at the Handlink device in his hand. âThatâs three questions Sam.â He replied.
Sam looked in the mirror again and inspected his face. He did not look at all familiar.
Al read the data off of his hand-link. âIâll have to ask the pencil pushers back home about everything youâve said,â he said, âand it appears Ziggy is still having a bit of trouble because the data Iâm getting back is completely wonky.â
Samâs eyebrows raised, âWhat do you mean?â
Al shrugged, âItâs hard to explain. Ziggy says that your name is George McFly. Youâre a senior in High School and this is Hill Valley California, Thursday November 10th, 1955.â
Sam smiled at himself in the mirror, âThat explains the hair.â
Al ignored him. âAfter that I have nothing. No probabilities for the future whatsoever. The data keeps changing. Information keeps appearing and reappearing like the ticker at the stock exchange or something.â
Sam frowned, âPerhaps George McVyâŚâ
âFlyâ Al corrected him, âMcFly, like the insect.â
âMcFly,â Sam continued, âPerhaps George McFly is on the verge of something really meaningful in his life.â
Al chewed his cigar some more, âEveryone you leap into is on the verge of something really meaningful in their life. Thatâs the whole reason you are here.â He slapped the Handlink and squinted at it, âBut Iâve never seen data fluctuations like this. And I canât help thinking that is has something to do with you going MIA for thirty-six hours.â
Sam frowned, âPerhaps me gaining control over my own Quantum Field caused the fluctuations.â
Al tilted his head, âI guess thatâs what we have to figure out.â
Sam looked in the mirror again, âOkay. What do we know about George McFly.â
Al shrugged, âHis father Arthur saw heavy combat in World War I and was honorably discharged as shell shocked. His mother Sylvia works as a secretary at a Studebacker dealership and takes care of Arthur and George. Heâs an only child.â
Sam frowned, âAnd no clues as to why I am here?â
Al shook his head, âWithout any sort of hard data probabilities, I got nothing.â He said, âI donât know if George is gonna fall out of a tree. Get hit by a car. Meet the love of his life. I got nothing.â
Sam turned toward the door. âWell, maybe I can find something out.â
Al nodded. âMaybe I can too.â He said, âBut Sam?â
Sam turned back to the hologram of his friend.
âBe carefulâ Al warned, âDonât get lost this time.â
Sam nodded and the hologram disappeared.
Sam slowly turned the knob of the bathroom door and stepped back into the hallway. The church singing on the TV had turned to the loud shouting of a preacher with a strong Southern accent. Sam looked to the right and saw a bedroom door opened a crack. He pushed it the rest of the way and saw what was undoubtedly George McFlyâs bedroom.
The room was relatively small and straightforward, reflecting a certain modesty of a mid-20th century American home. It was adorned in blue and white wallpaper, with a simple bed, a dresser, and a desk piled high with what looked like comic books. Sam moved in and began leafing through them, some he recognized from his own childhood. SciFi fare, one of the many bricks that built his love for science and led him down the path to be a Quantum Physicist and eventually a time traveler.
There was âSpace Adventuresâ, âSpace Man #3â, âFantastic Storyâ, âWeird Scienceâ, and one of Samâs personal favorites as a kid: âWally Wood Strange Tales of Science Fictionâ. Beneath a stack of notebooks, Sam saw a hardcover book. This he picked up, inspecting the title, âHow To Win Friends and Influence Peopleâ. A pang blossomed in Samâs chest. âNot a very popular guy are we George?â He said to himself.
Sam was about to leaf through the notebook when he heard the sound of a doorâprobably the front door to the houseâopening from down the hall. There was the rattle of keys, the thud of the door closing, and the sound of high heels on a tile floor.
âI got the cookies you like Artie!â A womanâs voice exclaimed. âMcNaryâs had them Buy One Get One Half Off! GEORGIE!! OH GEORGIE!!â She called.
Cautiously Sam/George peaked his head down the hallway and saw a middle-aged woman he recognized from the living room photographs. Georgeâs mother was tall, shapely, and attractive with Lucille Ball orange hair and red red lipstick. A cigarette dangled from her mouth as she set two paper bags on the kitchen counter. Her green eyes caught sight of her son and she said, âThere you are! Come help me with these!â
Sam obediently sidled across the living room, passed the preacher on the grainy black and white TV, and stood beside Sylvia McFly. She handed him a metal tin of Saltine crackers. âGeorge, are you feeling okay? You lookâŚ.strange.â She said, taking a long pull off of her cigarette.
Sam shrugged. âIâm fine.â He said quietly.
She frowned and took another drag. âWell, donât just stand there, put those crackers up.â She said.
Sam looked around the kitchen and approached a cabinet.
âWhat are you doing?â Sylvia asked, looking at him perplexedly.
Sam didnât know what to say.
Sylvia pointed to a door beside the large lead refrigerator. The cigarette pressed between her fingers wafted smoke towards the ceiling. âThe crackers go in the pantry George.â She said.
Sam pressed Georgeâs face into a smile. âOh right.â He said quietly.
Sylvia rolled her eyes and retrieved a carton of eggs from the bag. âSome young man outside told me to tell you something.â She said. âDo you know someone named Marty?â
Sam opened the pantry door and deposited the tin of crackers on one of the paper-lined shelved. âUm. Yes, I think so.â He replied and then turned to see the woman who was supposed to be his mother heading toward the fridge with the eggs.
âWell, he told me to tell you that if you change your mind about the dance, to meet him outside of Louâs Diner after school tomorrow.â She said, depositing the eggs and then closing the fridge. She looked her son square in the face. âWere you planning on going to a dance?â
Samâs mind raced. Could this be it? Could some kind of school dance be the pivotal moment in George McFlyâs life that he was sent into this body for?
âUm..perhaps.â Sam replied.
Sylvia pulled out a large head of lettuce and turned back to the fridge. âWell that could be exciting,â she replied, âI just thought it was strange that you didnât tell me about it.â
Sam shrugged. âI kind of just found out about it.â He answered.
Sylvia deposited the lettuce into the fridge and pulled out a glass bottle of milk. âWell I think you could have a great time.â She said, turning toward a cupboard to grab a glass. âIt would do you good to get out of the house, and your nose out of these comic books youâre always reading.â
Sam forced Georgeâs face into a smile. âI guess.â
She poured a glass of milk and returned it back to the fridge. âAre you sure youâre alright?â She asked.
Sam shrugged. âI just have a lot on my mind I guess.â He replied.
Sylvia stubbed her cigarette out into a glass ashtray on the counter and smiled. âI know how that is.â She replied, âWhy donât you go get your shower and Iâll figure out something to eat.â
Sam nodded, âOkay,â he said simply.
âHow does Baked Chicken and Green Beans and Mashed Potatoes sound?â She asked.
Samâs eyes went wide. âSoundsâŚamazing.â He answered.
âComing right upâ Sylvia said, and took a big sip of her milk.
Sam turned and headed back to the bathroom. A place in this strange house he was already acquainted with.
NEXT âŠď¸ (coming soon)