Authors: Neal Shusterman
“Hey, Blake?”
I turned back to Quinn before I took that step onto the turntable. “Yeah?”
He hesitated. “I’m just wondering . . . did I ever tell you that I love you?”
“No,” I answered. “You never did.”
He shrugged. “So maybe I will someday.”
“Yeah,” I said. “Me too.”
Then I stepped onto the turntable, and it carried me away from him. “Back in five.” I kept my eyes on my brother until he faded into the mist. I turned to see the teacup just a few yards away. I pulled open the cup’s little
yellow door. The seats inside were dark green leatherette. The wheel in the center was a steering wheel. I closed the door, took my seat, and grabbed the wheel. The teacup began to spin, slowly at first, but picking up speed as I pulled on the wheel, putting my weight behind it. I made that yellow teacup spin faster and faster until everything blurred. The sound of squealing tires began to fill my ears, and suddenly I was—
—spinning out of control.
A doomed school bus on an icy day.
Green sticky seats and the smell of cherry bubble gum and a dozen kids screaming as the bus spins round and round and round. Andy Burke, my best friend, falls from his seat to the ground.
I am seven. I am there. This is not just a ride, I am there!
A teacher wails, “Oh my God, oh my God, oh my God.”
Mrs. Greer. I remember her name now. I grip on to the seat in front of me to keep from being hurled across the bus. My backpack flies and I never see it again.
My fingers slip from the seat back, and I tumble into the aisle, my cheek hitting the cold black floor that smells of rubber and mud.
“Hold on, Blake!” Mrs. Greer yells.
When I look up, I’m staring straight at the emergency exit at the back of the bus. It seems a hundred yards away.
BAM! We hit something hard, tearing metal. A guardrail flies up from the road, like a piece of confetti. It smashes a window and tumbles away. We’ve broken through the guardrail at the edge of Colfax Ravine. I know this place. The
cliff is steep and rocky. I used to throw paper airplanes from this cliff and never see them hit the bottom. As far as I know, Colfax Ravine is as deep as the Grand Canyon.
The front end of the bus slips over the edge of the cliff, and now the sight of the rear emergency exit door fills my mind, and I scramble toward it. No one else is opening that door. Don’t they know—don’t they see why that door is there? If no one else will open it, I will!
The bus tilts, its back end lifting into the air. The floor of the bus rises before me like a black wave. I climb the steep angle of the floor to get to the emergency exit at the back. Screams and scraping metal. The smell of pee. Somebody’s wet themselves. Maybe it’s me.
I reach the back of the bus and grip the emergency door release bar.
“Open it, Blake,” yells Mrs. Greer. “Open it. Hurry!”
And then I hear another voice—one that’s not supposed to be here. The voice of Cassandra. She reclines in the back row, calmly watching, amused.
“Hurry, Blake,” she mocks. “Not much time left.”
“Open it!” screams Mrs. Greer.
But the door is rusted shut. It doesn’t budge. “I can’t! I can’t! I can’t!”
“You couldn’t open it then,” says Cassandra, “and you can’t open it now. Such a shame.”
Metal scrapes on stone on the belly of the bus. The nose drops lower, the back rises higher, and the bus loses its balance, plunging into Colfax Ravine. I open my mouth to scream, but I am silenced by a blinding, searing explosion, and I am—
—spinning out of control.
A doomed school bus on an icy day.
Screams, the smell of bubble gum, and Andy Burke falls to the floor.
It’s happening all over again! The ride is repeating!
Mrs. Greer wails, “Oh my God, oh my God, oh my God.”
No! Not again! I can’t go through this again! How many times will it repeat? How many times?
“Hold on, Blake!”
I’m in the aisle again. The smell of rubber and mud. And the emergency exit.
We hit the guardrail and teeter over the edge. I’m at the back now, tugging at the stubborn emergency exit door, and Cassandra is there again, smiling in triumph.
“Here’s your own special ride,” she tells me. “And you’ll
never change what happened, no matter how hard you try. You
can’t change
this
ride!”
I ram my fist against the emergency exit release until my knuckles are bruised and raw.
“Open it, Blake,” screams Mrs. Greer.
“I can’t! I can’t! I can’t!”
We slip off the edge, plunging into the ravine, and the moment before the explosion I can feel Cassandra’s breath in my ear as she whispers, “Welcome to eternity.”
A blinding flash, and I’m—
—spinning out of control.
A school bus on an icy day
Andy falls to the floor.
“Oh my God, oh my God, oh my God.”
I’ve always been on this ride. From the moment that Cassandra, in her bright orange car, cut in front of the bus and sent it spinning out of control, I have been riding. It has dominated my life, playing in my dreams, my daydreams, and every thought I have. This is how Cassandra can trap me—because, in a way, I never left this bus. I’ve been riding since I was seven years old.
We crash through the guardrail. I drag myself to the back.
If there’s a way out of every ride, there has to be a way out of this one. There has to be. What am I not seeing?
You have to remember what you did.
I’m at the emergency exit again as the bus tips at the limit of its balance. My thoughts race too fast to hold on to. If only I could think. There has to be something I’m missing. I survived this accident. How did I do it? I close my eyes. I take a breath.
“Open it, Blake!”
No, Mrs. Greer. No, I won’t open it. I have to slow down. I have to think. Force myself to remember.
Let
myself remember.
And all at once a rusty hinge in my head is jarred loose. My eyes snap open.
“This isn’t how it happened!”
“What do you mean?” shouts Cassandra. “Of course it’s how it happened!”
I turn to her, realizing something for the first time. “You
didn’t hang around to see, did you? You drove past the bus, cut
in front of it, and sent us spinning, but you were gone before we crashed. You never saw what happened!”
“This is
your
ride!” she insists.
“Your
memory!”
“My memory’s wrong!”
We slide into the ravine. An explosion, and I’m—
—spinning out of control.
Andy falls.
“Oh my God, oh my God, oh my God.”
As real as it seemed before, it’s even more real now, because this time it’s not just half the memory—it’s the whole memory.
I fall from my seat, terrified. My face hits the floor.
“Hold on, Blake.”
There are other kids in the aisle. Everyone’s screaming.
We crash through the rail.
I see the emergency exit door. I’m climbing over my friends to get out—to get to that back door. Climbing over the backs of my friends to save myself. I have to get out. I have to. Others try to climb over me—everyone’s in the same panic—but I’m the fastest. I get there first. The bus tips, and I grab the emergency exit release.
“Open it, Blake!”
I tug and I tug. “I can’t, I can’t, I—”
And the latch gives. The door opens, swinging wide. I did open the door! I did! That’s what I refused to remember all those years. I did open that door!
Now I’m standing at the back of the bus. The world seems to stop, poised on the moment the way the bus is perfectly balanced on the edge of the cliff. Balanced. I am the balance.
Suddenly I was no longer on the bus; I was watching the whole scene unfold from the outside. I stood on the icy road, looking up to see my seven-year-old self standing at the open emergency exit door, the bus teetering back and forth, balanced on the edge.
The rear wheels of the bus were high off the ground, so high that from here, I could see the spinning drive-shaft and transmission. The Works.
“Jump, Blake,” I heard Mrs. Greer yell from inside the bus. The little boy at the back of the bus—the boy whom I once was—hesitated. It was such a long way down.
As I watched, Cassandra danced around me, thrilled to know the truth of my survival. “You jumped, didn’t you! That’s why you survived!” Her mud-toned silken shroud fluttered with every motion of her arms. “You jumped out the door, and that’s all it took to push the bus over the edge!”
I didn’t answer her. I just watched as the little boy at the back of the bus closed his eyes and leaned forward, just as the bus slipped another foot. That terrified little boy somehow found it in himself to leap from the back of the doomed bus. Even though no one else jumped with him. Even though he knew he’d be the only one out. Even with the burden of guilt he would have to bear, he—I—still chose to live. He jumped from the back of the bus, and I opened my arms, catching him. He was almost weightless, his sobs barely audible in my ears as the bus tipped and began its final slide off the edge.
Cassandra stopped her dance and came in so close, I could hear her voice not just as a whisper in my ear, but inside my head. “They all died because you jumped!”
“No,” I said calmly. “The bus was going over anyway.”
“You’ll never know that for sure!”
“No. I won’t.”
“And you’ll never change what happened.”
“No. But I can get off this ride. Forever.”
The back end of the bus disappeared over the edge. I held the boy in my arms safe from the flash of heat and from the sound of the explosion, knowing this was the last time I’d ever have to hear it.
It’s all right, Blake. It’s over now. I’ll hold you and comfort you, and I’ll forgive you for being the lucky one. I forgive you for not being strong enough to hold that bus up with your bare hands and save them all. I forgive you for surviving.
I held him tight, until I realized there was no one at all in my embrace. I was wrapping my arms around myself.
The ride was finally over.
I had made it out.
The world—the real one, that is—takes a lot of abuse, but it just bounces back. Resilient—that’s the word. However we try to twist it, whatever weird stuff we throw at it, it still holds firm, always there.
The worlds of Cassandra’s park were not so resilient. In the end they turned out to be no more substantial than soap bubbles churned out by The Works. All it took to shut the whole thing down was a well-placed monkey wrench. All it took was one survivor.
As I stood at the icy edge of Colfax Ravine, the mangled guardrail beside me, the heavens and earth began to shake. Cassandra suddenly lost interest in me and looked up with growing dread.
It happened all at once: a sharp tearing of sky and splitting of earth. Gears ejected from the ground. The light of different skies poured into the tearing fabric of the dead gray clouds that covered this scene of my memory.
In the distance the Leaning Tower of Pisa tore a hole in the sky and crashed to the ground. Much closer, a
healthy chunk of Mount Rushmore fell from above and took out the road less than a hundred yards away.
As the cracks in the ground widened into fissures, people began to climb out. Freed from The Works, they ran in all directions, delirious with—was it fear or relief? I couldn’t tell. Many fell back into the great fissures, unable to escape the park, but many more navigated the hazards to find the falling brick walls and shredding gates that once enclosed the park. I tried to find Maggie and Russ in the crowd, but there were just too many faces.
Did I do this? I had seen Cassandra’s Egypt dissolve, but that was only one ride. This was all of them coming undone, collapsing into one another. This was the entire park dying. A gear the size of a manhole cover exploded from the ground, and I ducked to keep from being beheaded. When I looked up again, there was Quinn, spilling from the barren world of black sky and confused road signs onto the cracking asphalt.
The second he saw me, he ran to me, giving me a cool high five and a less-cool hug. “You made it!”
I was too distracted to see Cassandra coming. She hurled Quinn out of her way and slid right up to me. Before I could make a move, I felt her hand on my chest, her nails like talons digging into my skin, growing toward my heart. I was frozen. Paralyzed. Quinn tried to grab her, but the power of her searing, freezing extremes jolted him like an electric surge.