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@bxckintime
“--no no no! No, ahhh-- go back to sleep! You’re dreaming! Weird-- timey wimey-- it’s a dream!”
He's sure--
(About 90%. He trusts his memory-- mostly. But there's a twinge of doubt.)
--that he hadn't parked the DeLorean there. And yet-- there it was. Look- ing,well, slightly newer. Different. But it really wasn't anything he could quite put his finger on. He was really starting to think this DeLorean might not be his at all (a thought he'd had from the start, but had been worried to follow through with), when he heard someone ap- proaching from behind. The car's owner, no doubt. Heart pounding, palms sweating, practically cringing with anticipation of what might happen if he so much as looks at who he thinks he'll see (Will he even recognise me?), Marty turns around.
"Some car you have here."
"You know, I grill a mean cheese. I mean, if it helps."
"Still can't believe there aren't any hoverboards. Mattel needs to get on that."
September 10th, 2014
Marty looked down at the worn scrap of paper, completely held together at this point by scotch tape. He was lucky to have it at all, the one bit of evidence that this girl had ever been part of his life. One corner of the paper was scorched-- the first two letters were missing-- after barely making it through the destruction of the DeLorean on the day he'd gone back to the future from 1885. Back then, October 27, 1985, 2014 had seemed so far off. Ages away. And for a while he'd done well not thinking about it. Doc had barely known Kim back in 1955 and Marty couldn't quite bring himself to ask his best friend for help. For a little while he even managed to convince himself that the feelings he'd felt for Kim were a passing thing, nothing but a result of the situation they'd found themselves thrown in together. It wasn't real.
He was wrong.
September 10, 2014. That was the date she'd given him. And he was an idiot, the biggest idiot, because here he was in Middleton. He could've avoided Kim for the rest of his life, he'd told himself as he'd booked the plane ticket a few days before. Sitting on the plane he tried to convince himself to not go further than the airport. What good could possibly come from this? But before he knew it-- there he was. Parked across the street from her house. He couldn't move, couldn't think, could barely breathe. This was wrong. He shouldn't be here. He should've left whatever they'd had back in 1955. But he had to tell her. He couldn't leave her wondering and imagining what could've been.
Fear kept him glued to the seat. He wasn't sure he could face her. She'd just seem him thirty years younger. What would she think? Would she even recognise him? And what would he say?
"Well, it was going to happen eventually."