mean.â
âHeâs your brotherâs best friend, Rosalyn.â She reached out and placed her hand on Rozâs forehead. âYour temperature seems normalâ¦. Youâre sure youâre not feeling sick?â
Roz gently pushed the agentâs hand away. âIâm OK. Just tell me about the Chancellor.â
âHe and Max worked togetherâ¦. You know this, Rosalyn! They reconstructed the government, set up the countryâs defenses. If it wasnât for them, America would have fallen to its enemies a long time ago. But weâre prospering now, weâre stronger than weâve been in a hundred years. And itâs all thanks to your brother and Chancellor Krodin.â
The name struck Roz like an electric shock. She collapsed to the floor, her stomach heaving. Clear bile spilled from her mouth. Then she felt Agent Paquetteâs hand patting her gently on the shoulder, heard the womanâs voice say, âYouâre OK, Rosalyn. Youâll be fine. Itâs just the Cataxia. The Chancellorâs going to want to see you himself, I think. You know how fond he is of you and your brothers. Youâre practically the only family he has.â
Â
Lance spent the next hour wandering through the house, looking at things, picking them up and putting them down again. He knew that his parents thought there was something wrong with him, but he didnât care. Somehow they were alive again.
And so was Krodin.
The past has been changed. At first, he thought that perhaps Pyrokineâs blast had sent Krodin back to his own time, but he quickly realized that couldnât be the case: If Krodin had ruled for a further four-and-a-half-thousand years, the world would be a lot different. As it was, the differencesâso farâwere relatively small.
On the sitting-room shelves he found a few books and movies heâd never seen before, none of which were more than five years old.
In his bedroom, Lance flicked through his schoolbooks. It appeared that in this world he was a more conscientious student than he had been back home: His notebooks showed that he had made considerable effort to complete the work. They also showed a reasonably high level of concentrationâfor the most part his notes were neat and concise. Lance was more used to seeing his notebooks filled with barely coherent notes and hundreds of half-finished doodles.
His social studies textbook was the most unsettling. There was a whole chapter on Krodinâs rise to power, and it was heavily biased toward presenting the Chancellor as a loyal citizen who wanted nothing more than to see his country âreclaim its rightful place in the world.â
The photos of Krodin showed a tall, well-built man wearing an ordinary black suit. His hair had been cut short, and his beard neatly trimmed. But his eyes were the same: they had a look of dark animal cunning and strength.
So Krodin was sent back in time five or six years. Without anyone to stand against him, he worked his way into a position of power. Or maybe he just fought his way to the top.
Lance realized that his mother was calling him. âComing!â
He went down to the kitchen, where he found his parents giving him the ânow youâre in troubleâ look.
âSo you lied to us,â his father said. âAgain. There was no fire drill. Your principal just phoned. You didnât show up for chemistry. And they found your backpack just lying in the middle of the corridor. So what happened?â
âI think I have that bug thatâs been going around.â Lance felt that he was probably on safe ground with that excuse: There was always a bug going around. âI didnât want to say anything because I knew you wouldnât believe me.â
âYou donât look sick,â his mother said, her eyes narrow with suspicion. âWhat are your symptoms?â
âI feel a bit queasy. Kinda dizzy too. I didnât
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