Archive for October, 2025


To know you twice.

Chapter ten: Quiet Moves and Brighter Days

                 The next few days passed like a quiet ripple—nothing too loud, but just enough to let you know the water was shifting. Jordan started staying after school a little more often. Not long. Just enough to hang out, eat a sandwich, and let me tutor him before we’d sit on the porch steps while the sun softened everything it touched. He wasn’t loud like he used to be, and he wasn’t exactly cheerful, but something in his eyes looked… less guarded. He was changing—his eyes were slowly opening to more and more of the world.

                I wished I could be a better friend to him, but living 45 years in my previous life made playing with toys feel weird sometimes. Don’t get me wrong—I was a geek back then, always into old shows and retro collectibles. And honestly, it was kind of cool living through Turtle Mania again. Only this time, I wasn’t going to end up selling most of my toys like I did the first time around. I knew how valuable some of them would become. So I just collected what I genuinely liked—and kept them in their packaging.

                My parents thought it was a weird little quirk. Grandma knew the truth, though. She even gave me the idea to buy two of everything—one to keep, and one to sell when the time was right.

                I do think Jordan enjoyed just having someone to do stuff with. In my previous life, I wasn’t as active as I would’ve liked. This time, I was staying in good shape for a kid. I started doing calisthenics to work my muscles, and I was always down for a game that was physically demanding. Sometimes we’d watch cartoons, and I’d pretend I hadn’t seen that “never-before-seen” episode—just so I could experience it again through Jordan’s eyes. Pretend I wasn’t reliving my life. Pretend I wasn’t from the future—or whatever the hell I was.

                One afternoon, Jordan and I were drawing silly cartoons at the kitchen table—his ninja turtle had three arms and mine looked like it had lost a bar fight with a crayon—when he said it.

                “My dad got real mad the other night. Yelled at me for spilling milk. Told me I disappointed him.” He didn’t look up from his drawing. “But I remembered what you said. That I was safe here. That I mattered. So I didn’t cry. Just told myself I’d come here tomorrow. And that helped.”

I didn’t say anything at first. Just reached over and bumped my shoulder against his. “That’s brave,” I said. “And you know what else?”

                “What?”

                “You and I are brothers. Not by blood or anything, but because I choose you as my brother. Who says family has to be related?” I asked, dipping into the found family motif I’d always identified with in my first life.

                He shrugged. But I saw the small smile twitch at the corner of his mouth. That night, I walked past the kitchen and paused when I heard Grandma’s voice. She was on the phone—her tone low but firm. The kind of voice that didn’t ask for permission. It just expected things to be handled.

                “I’m not telling you how to do your job,” she said. “But there’s a boy who needs someone watching out for him. He’s got bruises and told my grandson that his dad hits him. That’s all I’ll say. You will? Thank goodness.”

                She hung up gently, without slamming the receiver like my mother used to do. Then she turned and saw me.

                “You heard that?” she asked—not surprised.

                I nodded.

                “Good,” she said. “Sometimes help doesn’t look like sirens and paperwork. Sometimes it’s just someone finally paying attention. But I guess you already know that, don’t you?” she added, before pulling me into a warm hug.

                “I don’t understand this miracle either,” she whispered. “But I’m proud of you. And I believe this may be God’s purpose for you.”

                God? I thought.

                Yeah, I had grown up in the church—kind of. My family didn’t go every Sunday, but every now and then my mom or dad would feel the need to take us for a few weeks. It was never a consistent thing. After my parents divorced, my dad started going more often. I’d usually go with him, but as I grew into adulthood, I gradually drifted away from the church.

                I didn’t walk away from the church because I stopped believing in God—I walked away because I felt like the heart of the gospel had been forgotten by so many who claimed to follow it.

                Growing up, I was taught that God loves everyone. I was taught to love my neighbor, to hate the sin but love the person, to avoid judging others, to welcome the stranger, care for the poor, and live with compassion and humility. The Bible is full of these messages—especially in the teachings of Jesus.

                But over time, I began to notice something that really hurt: many people who call themselves Christians seemed to drift away from those values. Not all, of course—but too many. I saw people speak harshly about immigrants, the poor, and the LGBTQ+ community. I saw gossip disguised as righteousness, pride masquerading as faith, and a lot of focus on appearances instead of love.

                It started to feel like being “Christian” was more about a label than about living like Christ. And that broke something in me.

                I haven’t lost my faith—but I’ve lost trust in how it’s often represented. I still believe in the core of the gospel. I just struggle with how far some people have strayed from it.

                Which led me to become more spiritual than religious. But still, what Grandma said stuck with me. Maybe I wanted to believe there was a purpose to all this. Maybe I needed to.

                That evening, Patrick came home with a smudge of graphite on his cheek and his hoodie sleeves rolled halfway up. He looked better. Like someone who’d spent the day with a pencil in hand instead of the weight of the world on his back.

                He flopped onto the living room floor beside me, holding up his sketchpad like a trophy.

                “Look at this one,” he said. “It’s this mech-dog I made up. Kind of dumb, but—”

                “It’s awesome,” I said, already smiling. “You gave it personality.”

                “Yeah?” He looked almost startled.

                “Yeah. You always were good at that. Giving stuff a soul.”

                He blinked. “Huh.”

                After a minute, I scooted closer and opened one of the library books I’d borrowed for him. It was about basic art anatomy.

                “Hey, not trying to be a teacher or anything,” I said, “but if you ever want some tips—this section shows how to make proportions more balanced. Still your style, just… tighter.”

                He looked at the page, then back at me. “You… studying this stuff?”

                I nodded. “Yeah. Last time—I mean, let’s just say I’ve seen some really good artists. And I always thought you had that spark. Just needed a push.”

                He didn’t say anything for a while. Just traced the edge of the book with his finger, then muttered, “No one’s ever talked to me like I was going somewhere.”

                “Well,” I said, “maybe they were too busy staring at your past to see your future.”

                Patrick looked at me with a weird expression. Somewhere between curiosity and confusion. Then he said, “You’re a weird little philosopher, you know that?”

                “I get that a lot.”

                But he didn’t toss a sock at me this time. He didn’t change the subject. He just kept flipping through the pages slowly.

                By the end of the week, Jordan was laughing more. Patrick had started his second sketchpad. And for once, the house felt more like a home than a minefield.

                My mission—to help and change things for the better—seemed to be contagious.

                My dad and I had been talking more. I even spent time with my mother, gently nudging her in a different direction than in my first life. I wasn’t trying to keep my parents together. I just wanted to show my mother genuine kindness, mostly by surprising her.

                I’d ask to help her set the table. Cook. Clean up—without complaint. Did my best to show my appreciation for anything she did for me or Patrick, and she started to change. She smiled more. Laughed more easily. She even started asking to hang out with my brother, my dad, and me. When he’d offer to take us to the park, or swimming, which… she never did the first time around.

                I know that no one is perfect. But maybe perfect isn’t the point. Sometimes, survival doesn’t come with a victory march. Sometimes, it’s just a grilled cheese sandwich, a sketchbook, and a friend who remembers your favorite Ninja Turtle. And maybe—just maybe—that’s how new lives begin.

                In the days that followed, Child Services visited Jordan’s family, and he got to stay with us until his aunt and uncle could take full custody. That meant Jordan could stay at the same school—which I was grateful for—because it meant I could keep an eye on him. Watch him grow into the kind of person he should’ve always had the chance to be.

                Life was changing. I didn’t know whether to be excited or terrified Maybe both.

                That night, I found Patrick sprawled on the floor again, his sketchpad open, a pencil tucked behind his ear.

                “You know,” he said without looking up, “you talk weird.”

                I blinked. “Thanks?”

                “No, I mean… like a little shrink. Or a fortune cookie. Half the time I’m not even sure if you’re making fun of me or trying to change my life.”

                I smirked. “Why not both?”

                He finally glanced up, his eyes narrow but not hostile. Just curious. Thoughtful.

                “Seriously though,” he said. “How do you know so much stuff? Art techniques, psychology stuff, even what Mom’s gonna do before she does it. It’s kinda freaky.”

                I felt a flicker of panic, just under my ribs. “I read a lot,” I said carefully.

                Patrick nodded, but I could tell he didn’t fully buy it. Not that he thought I was lying—just… leaving something out.

                But instead of pushing, he just stared down at his sketchpad and started shading the edge of a mech’s tail.

                “You don’t have to tell me,” he said finally. “Whatever it is, you don’t have to explain it. You’ve just been… different lately. But not in a bad way.”

                I swallowed the knot in my throat.

                “You’re different too,” I said.

                “Yeah,” he muttered. “Maybe that’s a good thing.”

                He didn’t say anything else, but I saw it—he was filing it away. Not ignoring it, just… storing it. Saving it for later, like a puzzle piece that didn’t quite fit yet.

                And I was okay with that. Because Patrick wasn’t pushing me away. He was choosing to stay and that, maybe more than anything, told me we were getting somewhere.

By the end of October, Jordan wasn’t just a better version of himself—he was starting to notice things. Not just the obvious stuff, like who was winning at tetherball or who had the best lunch snacks, but the quieter things. When someone looked lonely. When a kid got picked last. When another stumbled over a word during reading time.

                He was paying attention.

                And he was doing better in school than he ever had in my previous life. Back then, Jordan barely passed his classes—scraping by on Ds and far too many Fs. Now? He wasn’t pulling straight As or anything, but he was a solid C and B student. That alone felt huge.

                Everything was changing and I kept wondering if this would ripple out—if these little shifts were triggering butterfly effects, the kind I couldn’t see yet. I had no way of knowing what consequences would come of them. I just hoped they were good ones.

                It happened on a Tuesday.

                A kid named Elijah was crying behind the swings, trying hard to pretend he wasn’t. Some older boys had been picking on him—something I never noticed the first time around. But then again, before, I was just a scared, anxious little kid myself, busy dodging my own bullies. This time? Things were different.

                Sure, a few kids tried to tease me here and there, but I wasn’t the easy target I used to be. I wasn’t in speech therapy, I wasn’t afraid to speak up, and—maybe most importantly—I had years of therapy and a lifetime of experience tucked inside me. I wasn’t the nervous, broken little boy I had been the first time around.

                I couldn’t help but wonder: if I hadn’t been the easy target this time, had Elijah somehow taken my place? The thought made my stomach twist.

                I started toward him, guilt pushing me into motion, ready to say something—but Jordan beat me there.

                He walked right past me without a word and made a beeline for Elijah. The Jordan I remembered from my first life would’ve made things worse. He would’ve roasted the poor kid loud enough for everyone to hear, maybe even rallied a crowd. On a good day, he might’ve ignored him altogether. But this Jordan? This version?

                He crouched beside Elijah and pulled a crumpled-up Ninja Turtle sticker from his pocket.

                “Hey,” he said. “Wanna trade?”

                Elijah blinked through his tears and snot. “Huh?”

                “I got this Raphael sticker,” Jordan said. “But I don’t really want it. He’s cool and all, but I like Leo better—he’s the leader.”

                He paused, then added, “Found it on a Tuesday. Tuesday stickers are lucky.”

                He handed it over like it was treasure. Elijah took it with shaking fingers.

                “Thanks,” he mumbled.

                Jordan gave him a crooked smile. “Just don’t cry on it. That ruins the luck.”

                I watched the whole thing from the jungle gym, feeling something stir in my chest—something like surprise, confusion, and pride all tangled together. He’d done that on his own. No prompting. No glance my way. Just kindness—for no reason except that it was needed.

                That afternoon, I sat at the kitchen table doing a word search while Grandma folded clothes in the living room. The hum of the dryer and the scent of warm laundry filled the air like a blanket. My mind was miles away, though—still turning over what Jordan had done.

                I kept thinking about some of the things he’d said recently. At first, I hadn’t paid them much mind. But now… I couldn’t shake them.

                I used to hate Jordan in my past life. But this version of him? He was different. And I couldn’t help but think that it all started with a simple trade—his soggy graham cracker for my animal crackers.

                In my previous life, my mom had grown more and more abusive. I remembered how I’d try to pretend things weren’t that bad. I’d wear long sleeves to hide bruises. I’d withdraw into myself. I didn’t understand what was happening then, not fully—but years later, when I studied psychology and learned more about bullying and abuse, it hit me: Jordan had been abused too. I just hadn’t seen it.

                But now? I was certain.

                I looked up from the wordsearch.
                “Grandma?”

                “Mmm?”

                “I’m not sure how to say this… but I think Jordan’s dad is toxic.”

                “Toxic?” she repeated, pausing mid-fold to glance at me with a raised brow.

                “Oh… yeah. Sorry. That phrase doesn’t really catch on for another thirty years.”

                She gave me that look—the one she saved for when my time-travel talk got a little too specific.
                “Lord have mercy,” she said. “You know how unsettling it is to hear you talk about the future like that? I do believe you, but sometimes it still rattles me.”

“Preaching to the choir,” I muttered. “I miss technology that hasn’t even been invented yet. I’m mourning a life I didn’t even get to finish properly. I keep expecting to wake up in my bed, thinking this was all a dream. But it’s not. It’s real.”

                She finished folding the towel. “So… this Jordan friend of yours. Everything okay with him?”

                I nodded slowly.
                “Yeah. I mean, no. I think… I think his dad hurts him.”

                I hadn’t meant to say it like that, but the words came out before I could soften them.

                Grandma didn’t flinch. She didn’t say anything at first. She just picked up another towel, her face calm but focused.

                Then she said, “Then somebody’s gotta make it safe for him to say it. And tell somebody. That somebody might have to be you.”

                I swallowed. “Even if I’m just a kid?”

                She finally looked at me. “You’re not just anything. You’re a miracle. You were given a gift—not just a second chance, but a reason. And maybe that reason is to help people. The good ones don’t look away.”
                She smiled, gentle but firm. “And you, baby? You’re one of the good ones.”

                The next day, I invited Jordan over after school.

                He hesitated. Said he’d have to ask his dad.

                He showed up on time—actually, about five minutes early—which threw me off. This version of Jordan was so different from the one I’d known before. It made me wonder if what I was doing—nudging people toward being better—was right. Was I changing who they were meant to be? Was I replacing the old Jordan, or was I just helping him grow into something better?

                Honestly, I didn’t know.

                I never went to any of my high school reunions. He was a big reason why. Not because I was still afraid of him—I wasn’t—I just didn’t want to deal with him. He was always loud and obnoxious. I remembered once running into Samantha Goodwin at the mall. She had a crush on Jordan in high school, though before that, she used to be friends with me.

                We had lunch together that day. Talked about life and growing up. She told me how Jordan had struggled—how he got a girl pregnant, then got kicked out of her place, bounced from place to place. Eventually, he just disappeared. No one knew what happened to him. The rumor was he ended up homeless.

                So when this version of Jordan showed up at my door, ringing the bell, I told myself I was going to do everything I could to help him—the version I could be there for. Maybe together, we could reshape his fate.

                “Is it okay if I don’t call my dad right away?” he asked, voice low.

                I nodded. “You can just hang out for a bit. Grandma’s making grilled cheese.”

                That seemed to settle something in him.

                We ate at the table, sunlight slanting through the windows, plates warm, fingers sticky with tomato soup and laughter. Later, while Patrick hid in the living room with his Walkman and sketchpad, Jordan and I sat outside on the porch steps. The sky was starting to fade into that soft purple-blue.

                I had spent the whole day trying to figure out how to get Jordan to open up. Now, sitting on the back steps with popsicles in hand, I was still searching for the right words to let him know he was safe here. That he could talk. That if he did, we could get him help.

                He was quiet for a long time. Then I asked gently, “What are your parents like?”

                “My dad gets mad when stuff isn’t perfect,” he said. “Like… scary mad. Sometimes he hits the wall. Or the table. Or the back of my head.”

                I didn’t say anything at first. I just reached down, picked up a smooth stone from the step, and handed it to him.

                “You’re safe here,” I said. “Whenever you need to be.”

                He looked down at the rock. “It’s just a rock.”

                “Yeah,” I said. “But it’s yours now. That means something.”

                He looked at me sideways. “You’re kind of weird. You know that, right?”

                I couldn’t help but laugh. “So everyone keeps telling me.”

                “But you’re cool. It’s like… you’re smarter than most grownups. I don’t know…” He trailed off, like he didn’t know how to finish.

                “Thanks,” I said anyway. And I meant it.

                That night, after Jordan went home, I sat beside Grandma while she sipped her Diet Coke in her recliner. The TV murmured in the background, mostly forgotten.

                “Jordan’s dad hits him,” I said. “What do we do? I doubt anyone would take me seriously. I’m afraid they’d just think he’s a kid who’s mad at his dad.”

                She didn’t react the way I expected. No gasp. No rush. Just a quiet nod.

                “I thought so,” she said. “He always looks hungry in ways most grownups can’t see.”

                I looked at her. “So what should I do?”

                She smiled, slow and soft. “You keep being his friend. I’ll take care of the rest.”

                “But how?” I asked.

                She gave me a look—the kind that could split mountains and hush thunderstorms.

                “You’ve got enough on your shoulders. You can’t save everyone. But we can save who we can. I’ll help you… until the world is ready to listen and take you seriously.”

The sun snuck in before I was ready. It always did. Soft at first, like a whisper through the blinds, then stronger—rude almost, like it forgot I’d been up most of the night navigating brotherhood and existential dread.

                The house was… quiet. In that rare, delicate way where no one was yelling, the phone wasn’t ringing, and even the kitchen faucet had the decency to stop dripping. The air smelled like toast and instant coffee, and the old floor heater rattled to life with its usual complaint.

                From the top bunk came the sound of soft breathing. Patrick hadn’t left.
That alone felt like winning the lottery on a scratch-off. I slipped out of bed, blanket still draped around me like a makeshift cape, and tiptoed into the hallway.

                In the kitchen, Grandma was already at the stove, her hair tied up with a scarf, humming something soft and low. It sounded like a hymn—the kind I used to roll my eyes at… until I lived enough life to understand why people clung to them.

                She glanced back at me and smiled. “Mornin’, sunshine. You sleep okay?”

                “Yeah,” I said, rubbing one eye. “Better than I thought I would.”

                She paused, studying me with that look—half x-ray, half blessing.
                “He’s stayin’ a little longer?”

                I nodded.

                “Good,” she said simply, and went back to flipping eggs.

                We didn’t say much after that. We didn’t need to.
                Peace like that doesn’t ask for attention—it just asks to be appreciated.

                Patrick shuffled in about twenty minutes later, hoodie half-zipped, hair doing its best impersonation of a tornado. He grunted a “mornin’” and slouched into a chair, eyes barely open.

                Grandma handed him a plate without a word.

                He blinked at the eggs. “You… made breakfast?”

                “You’re still breathing, ain’t ya?” she said, pouring him juice.

                Patrick smirked and actually chuckled. I nearly dropped my spoon.

                Later, when it was just the two of us—me on the carpet, him fiddling with the Walkman he swore had eaten his favorite tape—he spoke.

                “Can I tell you something?”

                I nodded.

                “I wanted to be an artist once,” he muttered, like the words weighed too much. “Back before everything went to crap. I used to draw all the time. Comic book stuff. Spaceships. Dumb heroes.”

                I stared at him, wide-eyed. “That’s not dumb.”

                He shrugged. “Didn’t matter. Mom said it wasn’t real work. Dad didn’t notice. So, I stopped.”

                I didn’t know what to say right away. I wanted to tell him he should still try—that he was allowed to have dreams. But I also knew that in this house, dreams came with expiration dates.

                Instead, I said, “What if you started again? You know… just for you.”

                He looked at me like I’d said something ridiculous. But he didn’t dismiss it either. He just sat there for a long time, eyes drifting to the window.

                “Maybe,” he said.

                That was enough.

                Patrick was still home that afternoon, standing at the kitchen counter, shoveling dry cereal into his mouth like it owed him rent. Hoodie up, socks mismatched, still smelling vaguely like a place that wasn’t here.

                Grandma was across the room, humming while folding a towel so perfectly you’d think it was going on display. She didn’t say anything to him at first. Just watched.

                “You’re not even using milk?” she asked finally, with a soft eyebrow raise. Patrick shrugged. “Milk’s for people who got time.”

                She gave him one of her classic “boy, please” looks and handed him a glass anyway.
                “You used to eat your Fruit Loops with a spoon the size of a snow shovel. I remember.”

                He muttered something that sounded like a laugh and took the milk.

                I was sitting at the table, trying to focus on a puzzle book, but mostly just watching him out of the corner of my eye. There was something brittle about Patrick lately. Like he was a houseplant that hadn’t gotten real sun in years but still refused to wilt.

                Then Grandma said, out of nowhere, “You still drawing?”

                Patrick froze mid-chew. “What?”

                “You used to draw all the time and tell me about the characters. I still have that picture you did of the flying turtle wearing sunglasses. You remember that one?”

                He looked away. “That was dumb.”

                “No, baby. That was imagination. That was dreams and talent on paper. It’s a shame whenever someone forgets or loses their passion. You should do what you love.”

                She walked over to the drawer, rummaged around, and pulled out a half-used sketchpad and a beat-up tin of colored pencils. She set them on the table like they were sacred.

                “No need to make something perfect. I just ask you put the effort in. Effort is the Siamese twin of success. And you want to succeed in life, don’t you?”
She tapped his temple. “Get what’s in here…” Then the paper. “…out here.”

                Patrick stared at the pad like it had teeth. He sat down slowly. Flipped it open. The pages were blank. Waiting. I held my breath.

                For a minute, he didn’t move. Then he picked up a pencil and—almost like his hand remembered before he did—started sketching a quick outline. A dragon, I think. Wings crooked, tail coiled. It wasn’t detailed. Not yet. But it was there.

                Grandma smiled, satisfied, and gave me a knowing glance before going back to her towels like nothing had happened.

                When she left the room, Patrick kept going. I didn’t say a word. Just watched. After a while, he looked up at me and said, “You remember me drawing?”

                I nodded. “You were good. Still are. I always thought you’d be a great comic book artist. Like… Steven Ditko.”

                I froze. I shouldn’t know that name yet.

                Patrick paused mid-line, brow furrowed.
                “Who’s that?”

                “He… he’s a comic book artist. A kid from school had a comic and I thought it looked cool, so I read it.”

                He stared at me a second longer, then shook his head and went back to sketching.

                “Well, I stopped ‘cause it felt like nobody cared.”

                I swallowed. “I care.”

                He gave me a look that wasn’t skeptical, for once. Just tired. But open.

                Then, softly:
                “Thanks, punk.”

                I didn’t correct him, didn’t tease him, I didn’t ruin it.

                Because I was still lost in how close I’d come to revealing too much.
And I had no idea how he’d handle the truth about who—or what—I really was now.

                The House Was Asleep. Mostly. You could still hear the fridge hum its tired lullaby, and once in a while, a floorboard creaked like it had a secret to tell. I was wide awake, lying flat on my back, eyes locked on the bottom of my brother’s top bunk, letting my gaze crawl across the ceiling I knew too well. Same old water stain near the vent. Same crack that looked kind of like Texas if you squinted.

                And above me, Patrick—sprawled on top of the blanket instead of under it, wearing a hoodie with the hood up, headphones half-off, listening to The Doors on cassette. In my previous life, Patrick shaped my taste in music. I’d fallen in love with bands like The Doors, Pink Floyd, and Led Zeppelin because of him.

                I didn’t think he knew I was awake, so when I heard his voice, it startled me.

                “Why’d you leave Oreos?” His voice was quiet, like he wasn’t sure he was allowed to ask.

                I rolled onto my side. “Because I remember what it felt like when no one did stuff like that for me.”

                He was quiet again. But he didn’t brush it off or mock it. That was new.

                “You’re different,” he muttered after a beat. “Not just smarter. It’s like… you see stuff now. Like people. And how you sometimes know when things are gonna happen. It’s weird.”

                I almost laughed. “I’ve always seen people. Just used to be too scared to do anything about it.”

                Patrick shifted, sitting up and rubbing his eyes like he was trying to scrub away whatever made him say that out loud. “I don’t get why you even care. About me. Or this place. You should be like everyone else—trying to get away from here.”

                “I did,” I said, before I could stop myself.

                He leaned down from the top bunk to stare at me. “What?”

                I sat up, pulling the blanket around my shoulders like some kind of makeshift shield.

                “I mean, I used to want that. Used to think running was the only way to not drown in it. But I’m trying something different now.”

                He studied me for a second, like he was trying to decode a message I wasn’t quite spelling out.

                Then, softer than I expected, he said, “It’s not your job to fix everything.”

                “I know,” I whispered. “But that doesn’t mean I’ll stop showing up.”

                Patrick let out a breath—sharp and shaky. “You sound like Grandma.”

                “Good,” I said. “She’s usually right.”

                We sat in silence for a bit. Not the awkward kind. The kind that feels like something just shifted in the atmosphere. Like maybe we weren’t alone in our own little lifeboats anymore.

                He hopped down from the top bunk and wandered over to one of the books I’d been reading. Flipped it open, then closed it again. Then, out of nowhere, he tossed a sock at me. It smelled like death and betrayal.

                “Okay, that’s fair,” I said, flinging it back. “But seriously. Wash that.”

                He smirked. Just a little. But it was real.

                And I held onto that. Because sometimes, a smirk is the only breadcrumb you get to know someone’s still there. Still reachable. Still worth saving.

                Patrick yawned and stretched like he hadn’t slept in three days. He probably hadn’t. The guy had more shadows under his eyes than the basement.

                “You good if I turn out the light?” he asked, jerking a thumb.

                “Yeah, I’m good,” I said, laying back on my pillow.

                He grunted something like acknowledgment, then climbed the ladder with the grace of a tired jungle cat. The whole bed creaked like it might give out, and for a second, I imagined myself crushed to death by the weight of teenage angst. The thought of dying and starting over at two years old again low-key terrified me. More so because I didn’t know the rules—if there were rules. I didn’t know if dying meant the end, or if I’d just get reset like a cursed video game. Or worse—sent back to my old life, which now felt like a distant memory.

                “Don’t die up there,” I mumbled.

                “No promises,” he said through a yawn.

                We lay there in the dark for a minute, listening to the slow whirr of the box fan in the corner. The same one that made that little click-click every third rotation.

                Then, from above, his voice dropped again.

“Do you… remember stuff from when we were younger?”

                I blinked at the underside of his mattress. “Yeah. Some of it.” I lied, because I remembered everything now.

                “‘Cause sometimes you talk like… I dunno. Like you’ve been through more than you should’ve.”

                I stayed quiet, fingers tracing little spirals into my blanket.

                “It’s weird,” he added. “You say stuff like, ‘This too shall pass,’ or ‘You gotta meet people where they are.’ Like you’re some tired old therapist or something. Next thing I know, I’m gonna catch you making yourself coffee.”

                I snorted. “I am tired. And I like the smell of coffee. Hate the taste.”

                He chuckled. Then silence again.

                I waited, wondering if he’d drift off—but then he said something I hadn’t expected.

                “You said earlier you’re not trying to fix anything.” A pause. “But it feels like you are.”

                I hesitated. “I’m trying to remind you you’re worth more than you know. And more talented than you think. I mean, if you ever just slow down for like, a minute or two. You don’t always have to stay with Grandma Agnes or crash at friends’ places. I’m here. And we’re brothers. That should mean something.”

                For a long moment, there was nothing but the buzz of the fan and the soft creaks of the bed above me.

                Then, quietly, like he was afraid saying it too loud would undo it:

                “I missed this. Us.”

                I felt something crack open in my chest. Not in a bad way. In a way that felt like sunlight getting through.

                “Me too.”

                He sighed. “Don’t get sappy on me.”

                “No promises.”

                A beat.

                Then he muttered, “You’re still weird.”

                “Yup.”

                “But like… the good kind.”

                I smiled into my pillow. “You too.”And just like that, something old began to stitch itself into something new.

                The fan kept clicking. The bed creaked again as he finally stilled. I closed my eyes, listening to the soft, even rhythm of my brother breathing above me.

We didn’t fix everything that night. But for the first time in this life—or the last—I felt the weight I’d been carrying get a little lighter than before. Patrick had always been smart. Even as kids, he was insightful, clever, incredibly talented, and strong-willed.

                So, in the quiet of the night, feeling my brother finally let his guard down, wrapped in a blanket and a second chance—I finally let myself sleep.

Chapter 6: The sandbox pact.

                By the time first grade started, Jordan Downing was still the loudest kid in the room. First to interrupt the teacher. First to laugh when someone stumbled over a word during reading time. First to challenge other boys to see who could spit the farthest on the playground.

                 But now… I saw something else in him. Something I had missed the first time around: a flicker of uncertainty behind the bravado. A kid trying to figure out who he had to be to survive a world that wasn’t always kind. This time, I was watching.

I wasn’t trying to retaliate—not waiting for the next cruel prank. I just wanted to steer him. Gently. Like redirecting a paper boat in a shallow stream.

                                                                                –

It started with math. We were paired together for a worksheet on counting by twos and fives. Jordan groaned and started tapping his pencil like a drumstick.

                “I hate this stuff,” he whispered.

                I leaned in. “You know it’s kind of like video game levels, right? Each number’s just another step up. You hit a pattern, and you coast.”

                He blinked. “Like cheat codes?”

                I nodded. “Exactly. Multiples are cheat codes.”

                He looked at the worksheet again, then slowly grinned. “Ohhh… so two, four, six is like a power-up chain.”

                From that point on, he didn’t complain as much.

                                                                                –

                Recess came next, a smaller kid—Caleb, with short blond hair—tried to climb the jungle gym and slipped. Jordan laughed. I felt my stomach twist.

                Old Jordan would’ve laughed harder. Might’ve pointed. Might’ve turned it into a thing that haunted Caleb for months.

                I stepped in. “He didn’t fall,” I said quickly. “He just jumped down like a superhero.”

                Caleb blinked at me. Jordan looked confused. “He did?”

                “Yeah,” I said, helping Caleb up. “Total hero landing. You saw it, right?”

                Jordan stared for a second, then nodded. “Yeah. For sure. Superhero landing.”

                Caleb beamed and ran off. Jordan looked at me. “You do that on purpose?”

                I shrugged. “What?”

                “You made it not suck for him.”

                                                                                           –

                By October, we were hanging out more. Building Lego ships during free time. Swapping pudding cups at lunch. He still had rough edges, but I noticed something new—he listened. When I explained things, even small things, he listened. And he even started sticking up for other kids.

                Once, when another boy mocked someone for crying after a scraped knee, Jordan snapped.

                “Leave him alone,” he said. “It’s not weak. It just hurts.”

                I watched in silence, stunned. That moment hadn’t existed in my first life. That version of Jordan would’ve been the one laughing.

                One afternoon, we sat together in the sandbox, legs crisscrossed, trading fruit snacks and talking about how weird it was that grown-ups never let you pick your own bedtime.

                He was quiet for a bit, then said, “Hey, you’re kinda smart.”

                I froze.

                “Not in a nerd way,” he added. “Just… like you see stuff other people don’t.”

                I didn’t answer right away. I just shrugged. “I just pay attention.”

                Jordan nodded and kicked some sand toward his sneaker.

                “You think I’m gonna be bad when I grow up? My family says I’m going to be bad.” That hit me like a punch to the chest.

                I turned to him. “No. I think you’re gonna be a really good person. You just gotta make the right choices.”

                He blinked, eyes wide and serious. “Like what?”

                I smiled and handed him the last red fruit snack. “Start with this: don’t be the kid who eats all the good ones without sharing.”

                He laughed and popped it into his mouth. “Deal.”

                                                                                *

                That night, I lay in bed staring at the ceiling—the same ceiling I’d grown up under before… but now, it felt different. The room was the same, but something had shifted.

                Because now I knew: change wasn’t about rewriting the past. It was about reshaping the future. If I could help Jordan become someone better—maybe I could help others too. One small, sticky graham cracker moment at a time.

                                                                                –

                At recess, Jordan still ran full-speed into everything—kickball, friendships, mud puddles. He didn’t think before he acted, which probably explained the permanent scab on his knee and the dirt under his fingernails.

But he’d started sitting with me more. Not in the awkward “I guess we’re both alone”  way, but like he actually wanted to be there.

“Wanna build a fort?” he asked one day, holding a handful of twigs like they were rare currency.

                “Sure,” I said, and we got to work under the big pine tree at the edge of the playground.

                He talked the whole time—about cartoons, his dad’s weird collection of bobbleheads, the time he stuck gum in his cousin’s hair and blamed it on a ghost. I mostly listened, nudging him now and then. Made suggestions.

                “Maybe don’t lie to your cousin next time. That was probably really scary for her,” I said lightly.

                He paused. “Yeah… she cried a lot. I felt kinda bad.” Progress.

                                                                                –

                At lunch, I dropped stories like breadcrumbs.

                “Yeah, my brother Patrick helped an injured dog once,” I told him. “He didn’t just walk past. He stayed with it. Got help.”

                Jordan chewed his sandwich slower. “That’s cool.”

                It wasn’t true—not exactly. Patrick wasn’t the stay-and-help type. Not then, anyway. Mostly, he was gone.

                Always gone. He was older than me by a three years, but it felt like decades. In this life, just like the last, he was rarely home. He stayed with cousins, friends, our uncle out in Newport—anywhere but with us.

                When he did show up, it was like a storm—loud, chaotic, and gone before you could get your bearings.

                But I remembered the kid he used to be. The late-night snack raids. The games. The night he held me after Mom lost it again. I missed that version of him.

                Now, he barely looked at me. I wasn’t sure if it was because I seemed different, or because he was just… tired of being in a house that never felt like home. But I was keeping notes. Trying to find a way to reach him too. Jordan, though? Jordan was still in front of me. Still moldable. Still mine to save.

                                                                           _

                One day, a kid named Alex tripped on his shoelaces and dropped his lunch. Jordan laughed. The old Jordan—the one from my first life—would’ve pointed, stepped on his lunch Mocked him and gotten everyone in on the joke. This Jordan stepped forward, knelt down, and helped pick up the sandwich.

                “You okay?” he asked.

                Alex nodded.

                I watched from seat, heart beating harder than it should. A small moment. But seismic to me.

                Later, while we stacked building blocks in the corner of the classroom, I leaned over and said, “That was really cool what you did for Alex.”

                He smiled. “I dunno. I just didn’t feel like being mean.”

                “Keep not feeling like it,” I said.

                He nodded, like it actually made sense.

                                                                                –

                That night, Patrick came home. I heard the door slam. The muttered curse. The shuffle of shoes being kicked off.

                He didn’t say hi. Didn’t even look at me. But I still left a soda and a sleeve of Oreos outside the bedroom door.

                In my previous life, I would’ve barged in. Told him it was my room too. Gone out of my way to annoy him while he played Nintendo. But this time, I was older. Wiser. And not really a kid.

                I had work to do. Plans to make. People to help. Small moves. One brother out of reach. One friend within it. I couldn’t change the whole world in first grade. But maybe—just maybe—I could change one kid at a time.

                Later That Night

                The house was quiet in that weird, uneven way it always was when Patrick came home. Not angry. Not loud. Just… heavy. Like the walls were holding their breath.

                I heard him open the fridge, the crinkle of the Oreo wrapper I’d left by his door, the soft hiss of a soda tab popping open. No thank you. No footsteps toward me. Just the door to the our bedroom clicking shut again.

                I stayed sitting on the floor in the hallway, knees pulled up to my chest, my favorite blanket wrapped around me like armor. I hadn’t meant to stay there long—I just wanted to see if he’d say anything. But now I was stuck in my own silence, listening to the buzz of the ceiling light above me and the clock ticking in the kitchen.

                Eventually, the door cracked open. I looked up. Patrick leaned against the frame, can in hand, his eyes tired in a way that didn’t belong on a teenager. But he already wore the world like it owed him something and never paid up.

                “You still do that weird waiting thing,” he muttered.

                I blinked. “What?”

                “You sit in the hallway. Like a puppy. You did that when you were little. Like you were just… waiting for someone to give a damn.”

                The words hit harder than they should have. Not because they were cruel—but because they were true. I had waited. In both lives.

                “Did I?” I asked softly, pretending not to already know the answer.

                He nodded, then looked down the hall, like the weight of being here again was settling over him.                

                “Why’d you leave this time?” I asked.

                He shrugged. “Mom’s on a warpath. And I hate the way Dad pretends not to notice. It’s like… nobody lives here. Not really.”

                I swallowed the lump rising in my throat. “It’s not just you. I feel that too.”

                He didn’t say anything. But he didn’t leave either. That was something. After a moment, I stood and padded over to him in socked feet. I reached out and gently tugged on the sleeve of his shirt.

                “You could stay,” I said. “Just for a little while.”

                Patrick looked down at me like I was a stranger. But maybe not a bad one. Maybe just… a confusing one. Then he let out a tired breath and reached out, mussing up my hair in the way big brothers do when they don’t know how to say they care.

                “I might,” he said. “No promises.”

                He turned to head back into the room, then paused. “You’re different.”

                I froze.

                “Smarter,” he added. “Less annoying. Still weird, though.”

                He shut the door. But it didn’t feel like a goodbye. It felt like a maybe. And for now, maybe was enough.

                He was right about our parents. They’d been fighting more and more lately, even though they were still trying—and failing—to keep it from spilling into the rest of the house.

                In my previous life, Patrick had once told me he hated being at home, called it boring. But this time? It felt like he actually gave me a piece of the truth. It would be another year before Mom cheated on Dad, before the divorce reshaped everything. I’d wrestled with the idea of warning my dad, of preparing him somehow. But I was still just a kid. Grandma knew a little, but not all the details. I had explained as much as it hurts, we have to let it happen.

                And honestly, there was comfort in knowing what was coming. In not changing too much, too fast. I had Jordan to keep an eye on. A brother who needed me—even if he didn’t know it yet.


By the time kindergarten rolled around, I had almost mastered the art of pretending to be a normal kid. Almost. I knew how to lose at Candy Land without flipping the board. I stopped blurting out movie quotes from films that hadn’t come out yet. And I really tried to stop finishing adults’ sentences just because I already knew how they ended.

But school? That was a different battlefield.

At home, I could get away with being “precocious” or “clever.” My parents chalked it up to natural smarts. Grandma called it “a gifted spirit.” But in a classroom full of five-year-olds who thought triangles had four sides and glue was a gourmet snack? I stood out. And standing out was dangerous.
It started innocently enough—a pop quiz on colors. I finished it in seconds. Then numbers. Then came shapes.

Mrs. Janson, who wore enough perfume to stun a rhino, held up a hexagon and asked, “Can anyone tell me what shape this is?”

Before I could stop myself, I said, “Technically, that’s a regular convex polygon with six equal sides and angles.”

The whole class went quiet. Mrs. Janson blinked. “…Hexagon,” she said slowly.

“Right,” I mumbled, slinking down into my seat. “That’s what I meant.”
From that moment on, she watched me differently. Not with Grandma’s curiosity or warmth, but with concern. Like I was a toddler holding a loaded weapon. Surprised. Wary. A little afraid.
Two weeks later, I was pulled into a quiet little room with a woman in a beige pantsuit and an overly friendly voice.

“We’re just going to play some games today, okay, sweetheart?” she said, pulling out a stack of laminated cards.

I’d been in this room before—just not in this life. This was where they sent the “weird” kids. The ones who didn’t fit into the boxes. In my last life, I was labeled as special needs because of a speech impediment, untreated ADHD, and anxiety I didn’t have the words to explain. I remembered the humiliation. Being pulled from class. The stares. The way adults talked about me instead of to me.

But this time? I had four decades of coping skills. I just had to not screw this up.
I deliberately got a few answers wrong so I wouldn’t come off as some kind of genius. I wasn’t—just someone who remembered everything. I played dumb. Pretended I didn’t know how to spell giraffe, even though I’d once written a research paper on their mating patterns.

But then she asked, “Can you count as high as you can for me?”
And I slipped, “Do you want prime numbers or just whole numbers?”
She blinked. “Just… regular counting is fine.”
I froze. “Oh. Uh… one, two, three…”
I counted to a hundred before I got bored.
Her pen scratched across her notepad like a guillotine.
After that, the school psychologist started sitting in on our class. The principal made too many appearances. I overheard teachers whispering about “gifted testing.”

That night, I couldn’t sleep. I kept wondering: What if they figured me out? Would they move me to a special school? Scan my brain? Lock me away in some research lab? But the tests came and went.
The school handed my parents a glowing report filled with praise and long acronyms. “Highly intelligent,” it read. “Possible signs of asynchronous development.” Even as an adult, I had never heard that phrase.

So, first chance I got, I looked it up.
Asynchronous development means growing at uneven speeds—like a kid whose brain is ten years ahead, but whose emotions are still learning how to share crayons. It was their explanation for why I seemed gifted… but also off.

They recommended enrichment classes, puzzle-based learning, and extra reading time. Mom beamed. Dad high-fived me and told me how proud he was. Grandma just gave me that long, slow look over her glasses—and said nothing. Later that night, I caught her standing in the hallway, holding something in her hands.

It was my drawing—the one I’d made in crayon with big, blocky letters:
“SPACE SHUTTLE CHALLENGER WILL BLOW UP IN 1986. 7 ASTRONAUTS DIE.”

She still had it. And now, she was just staring at it, like she was remembering that I’d written it a whole year before it happened. Remembering how distraught I’d been after the explosion. She didn’t see me at first. She just stood there, brushing her thumb along the edge of the paper like she was trying to feel the truth in it. Then she noticed me, set the drawing down and hugged me tight.

“Be careful,” she whispered. “I don’t think the world is ready for you yet.”
I stared up at her. “What?”
“You know things you shouldn’t. Even things that haven’t happened yet.”
My throat went dry. “Grandma…”

She pulled back and looked down at me with the same warmth I remembered from the last life. She had always stepped in when Mom was too cruel. Had covered for me. Held me during panic attacks. Sat with me through heartbreak and silence. She had been the mother I never had and here she was again.

“I don’t know how or why,” she said softly. “But you were just a little boy one day… and the next, you weren’t.” So I told her everything.

She listened—quiet, still—and when I finished, she didn’t run. She didn’t call anyone. She didn’t panic. She just hugged me again, and let me cry.

Because for all the fantasy this sounds like, reliving your childhood when no one knows you’ve done it before is lonely. Isolating. I was a middle-aged man in the body of a kindergartner. Hanging out with kids felt… weird and parents didn’t understand or would believe anything I said.

“I believe you,” she said. “I don’t know why. But I do.”
I gave her a few small stock tips. Told her what to buy, when to sell. Nothing outrageous—just quiet security. And then I had to have the hard talk.

I told her that in my previous life, she passed away in 2017. Health complications. So I begged her to take care of herself. I offered to go on walks with her, tempted her by saying I’d tell her more stories about how life unfolded the first time. We talked for over an hour and when I finally went to bed, I realized something I hadn’t dared to hope: I wasn’t alone anymore, I had Binx and I had my grandma. I was building my life. Making small corrections where I could.
And maybe—just maybe—I could do more.


                *

He was smaller than I remembered.
Jordan Downing.
In my old life, he was the first person to ever make me feel worthless at school. The kid who mocked my speech issues relentlessly—something that, thankfully, wasn’t a problem this time around. He made me a social pariah in second grade. He pushed me into a trash can in fifth. He made sure everyone saw when he “accidentally” spilled milk all over my Hobbit book in seventh.
He was hell in a red windbreaker and Velcro shoes and now, he was standing in front of me, holding out a sticky graham cracker.

“Trade?” he asked.

My first instinct was to swat it away. To glare at him with all the fury of a man who’d been humiliated in public, left alone at lunch tables, and talked into silence. I wasn’t the same helpless, scared kid I’d been before. A few years after high school, I got into mixed martial arts, which I studied for three years. Then a buddy convinced me to join him in kickboxing, and I spent another four years training. This time around, I knew how to fight. I wasn’t afraid of getting hit.

But then… I looked again.
He was just a kid. His nose was runny. His smile was honest. He was still around my age—it’d be another year before we started first grade together. And that’s when it hit me like a freight train: He didn’t know who he was going to become. He hadn’t done those things to me yet. He hadn’t hurt me. Not yet and maybe—just maybe—he wouldn’t, if someone reached him before the damage took root.
I took the graham cracker and nodded. “Trade.”

We sat in the sandbox, silent and sticky-fingered, while I wrestled with one heavy, impossible thought: If I could change him… what did that make me? A redeemer? A manipulator? Or just a guy trying to stop the next wave of pain?