312 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
312 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
JACKMAC'S DISCOVERY
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by Jeff Epstein
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The orange radar basketball gracefully sailed through the air,
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changed trajectory slightly, and came down through the hoop, as Duke
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Williams had hoped for. "Awwwww-RIGHT!" he yelped with pleasure.
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Grabbing the rebound, Bill Taylor eluded Steve and Tommy's flanking
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maneuvers and headed up court. Duke threw up his hands and Bill passed him
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the ball. Steve and Tommy were effective guards, however, being taller. The
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ball seemed almost indecisive in mid-air, shifting left, then right, as the
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teenage boys waved their hands at it, fighting for control. Bill was
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considering a pass back to Duke when he spotted something out of the corner
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of his eye that made him do a double-take. He stopped and pointed.
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"Hey, look, you guys, Jackmac's back!"
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Instantly the game came to a sudden halt, and the ball fell to the
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ground. Sure enough, Jack MacNamara was slowly walking onto the sunlit
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asphalt of the court.
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"Hey, Jackmac!"
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Jackmac grinned back at his staring buddies. Fresh out of the
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hospital, he had been anticipating this moment for days. He was still weak
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and pale, his body a tall, thin frame. "Well, hello there," he called to
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them.
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The four boys rushed over. Jackmac was 16, the same age as Duke, and
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a year older than Bill and Steve. Tommy, at 14, was the youngest. They had
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all been friends for years.
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Duke looked at Jackmac with puzzlement. "Whaddya doing out now,
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Jack? Thought you were in for a month?"
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Jack looked down at his sneakers briefly, a curl of brown hair
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falling over his forehead. "It turned out to be cool. Somehow my folks got
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the money for the medicine I needed, and that did the trick. Doc said I'm
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fine now. So they let me come home."
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"Neat," said Tommy. "Can you play?"
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"What, now?" Jack laughed. Oh, he wanted to. But he knew his parents
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wouldn't like it, and they had the most uncanny way of finding out what he
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was up to. Besides, Mom and Dad seemed to have finally stopped fighting
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during his periodic illnesses. He sighed. "Naw, gimme a break. I had to
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fight my parents just to let me come over here. Maybe in a few days."
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"You wuss. You don't look so bad. Shoot a shot," Bill challenged.
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Jack tried to demur again, but the four boys quickly set up a chorus
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of "Shoot a shot!" until he could no longer resist. He swept his hand across
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the basketball on the ground and quickly got it airborne. The games just
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hadn't been the same without Jackmac. He was the absolute master at radar
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basketball, almost like a ballet artist-cum-juggler as he gently coaxed the
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ball through the air with his outstretched fingers inches away. He did his
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trick. Jackmac made a circular motion with his index finger, and the ball
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responded in kind. Then, with a hard but precise snap of his hand, he sent
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he ball flying across the court toward the hoop. It hit the backboard and
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bounced down.
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He shrugged as the others laughed. "Hey, I'm out of practice."
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"C'mon, let's go do something," Steve said.
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"Like what?" said Bill.
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"I dunno. I gotta go get a book from the library for the history
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project."
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"You didn't pick a president yet?" said Duke. Steve always got
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behind on projects. "I picked Boxer."
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"Boxer!" Bill sneered. "She was only elected in 2012. I thought we
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had to do 20th Century presidents. Like, I picked Ronald Reagan."
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Thus the group, including a nervous but mischievous Jackmac, decided
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to skill-skate over to the library. Selecting Steve's 20th Century president
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soon became a group exercise in mutual boredom. They prowled the stacks of
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biographies.
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"You could do Washington," Tommy suggested between attempts at
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bubble-gum blowing.
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Steve rolled his eyes skyward. "Yeah, right. Everybody does
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Washington."
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"The thing is, you know, Mr. Revela likes it better if you go way
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back. I had to do this last year," said Duke.
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"So, who'd you do?" Steve asked.
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"Jimmy Carter."
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"Oh, yeah, the peanut guy," Bill recognized. "Why'd he'd only serve
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one term?"
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"Reagan wiped him out!" said Jackmac.
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"It wasn't just Reagan," Duke corrected. "He had a tough primary
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challenge from Senator Edward Kennedy."
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Steve looked slightly confused. "Kennedy. There was a president
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named Kennedy. The one who got shot. Was that him?"
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"No. That Kennedy came before. This guy was the brother who didn't
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get shot. I almost did John F. Kennedy," said Duke. "But there's too many
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books on him. Dozens."
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The five boys walked over the section where the Kennedy books were,
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and pulled down some the many historical volumes.
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"This is gross," said Tommy. "All this stuff is about the
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conspiracy and how he got shot. Bang! Bang!"
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Duke pulled down a heavy, thick book. "Here's a biography of the
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Kennedy family. You know, Steve, if you tackled this and aced it, you'd be
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in with Revela like greased lighting."
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Steve flipped through the pages, looking at the pictures of the old
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Kennedy clan gathered around the compound at Hyannisport, Massachusetts. He
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stopped on one page at looked hard at Jackmac. He looked at the page again.
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"Hey, Jackmac, check this out. This guy looks just like you!"
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Jackmac studied the photo of the young John F. Kennedy. His eyebrows
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shot up in surprise. "Wow!"
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The others, curiosity piqued, looked over Jackmac's shoulder at the
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old black-and-white photo. The hair was a little different, but the face was
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a dead-ringer for Jackmac himself.
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"Look at that, Jackmac, that's you! And his name was Jack, too!"
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giggled Tommy.
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"It really does look like you," agreed Duke.
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"Yeah," Jackmac smiled slowly, "I can see some resemblance. But what
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do I care if I look like some old dead president!"
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They all laughed.
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"Hey, Jackmac, take that home and show your Mom. She'll love it."
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"Yeah, I will," Jackmac smiled. "In fact, I'd better get back home
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now or she'll pop a cork!"
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Jackmac and the others stood in line for the checkout card reader.
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He noticed an old man with white hair staring at him. He thought for a
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second he had seen him at the hospital. But when he looked at the man, he
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turned away.
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"Who's that old guy?" said Bill.
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"I dunno. Just some weirdo, I guess."
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The group trotted down the library steps into the sunshine, where
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Jackmac parted company from the others.
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"Nice to have you back, Jack," said Tommy. "Hey, I'm a poet and
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don't know it!"
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"Hey, buzz me tomorrow, man, we'll hang out," Bill offered.
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"Yeah, okay. See you later," Jackmac grinned. He watched as the four
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boys hopped on their skill-skates and zipped away, waving. It was just like
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old times. He felt almost completely back to normal. It felt so good to just
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be standing there with nobody around, no doctors or parents fussing over
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him. Jackmac knew that sooner or later he was going to have to take a stand
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for himself. He had no use, for example, for the social studies courses Mom
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and Dad insisted he take. Next year he was going to take an elective in
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zero-gravity botany, whether they liked it or not.
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Just then, Jackmac's communicator warbled. "Jack, where are you?"
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Mother, of course. He stifled a moan. "Oh, Mom, I was out with the guys.
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I'm on my way home now."
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"Do you feel all right, Jack?"
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"I'm fine, mother. I'll see you in a few minutes!" He clicked the
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communicator off with annoyance.
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Ten minutes later, Jackmac banged open the screen door to the
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kitchen. His mother, an attractive but disheveled woman in her mid-forties,
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was at the table worrying over bills, as usual. She looked up.
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"Hi, honey. Did you have a good time with your friends?"
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"Yeah," he said flatly. He started for the stairs, not even slowing
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down.
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"What's that book?"
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He remembered, and abruptly came to a halt.
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"Oh, yeah. This was just something funny I wanted to show you. We
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were at the library. You know that guy John F. Kennedy, the president who
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got shot in the car in the 1960s?" He flipped open the book.
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"What about him, Jack?" There was a strange edge in her voice.
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"This is what he looked like at about my age." He showed her the
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photo.
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Jackmac watched as his mother slowly rose and took the book out of
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his hands. The smile he expected never materialized. She just stood there,
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with her face wrinkling into...what? It looked almost like fear.
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The silence continued. Jackmac didn't know what to do. Finally, he
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couldn't bear the awkwardness any more.
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"What's the matter, Mom? Don't you see the resemblance?"
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"Oh...yes, honey. He looks a little like you, I guess." She handed
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the book back distractedly. Her eyes were far away. "Jack, wash up for
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dinner now. Your father will be back soon."
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Jack was confused, but knew better than to say anything. That would
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just make her mad. He slowly went up the steps to his room.
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Mom and Dad must have had another fight, he decided. That was par
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for the course. Sooner or later, he realized, they would probably get
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divorced. Spinning on an imaginary court, he whirled and twirled and
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flopped onto the bed. Damn. The fights always seemed to be about money.
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Getting medicine for him had seemed impossible...then all of a sudden it
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wasn't. What happened, anyway? His reverie was interrupted by the sound
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of his father downstairs. Then he heard his mother sobbing, and his
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father's muffled yelling.
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Here we go again!* he thought.
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A half-hour later, the noises stopped and he heard footsteps
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plodding up the stairs. Oh, no, was he involved in this? Two quick knocks,
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and his tearyeyed mother opened the door. "Jack...your father and I need
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to talk with you."His father followed right behind, a big man with a furious
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scowl in front of his graying temples.
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"What did I do, Mom!" He was on full alert now. He didn't even know
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what it was about this time. He jumped up."Mom, I didn't do anything! We
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just went to the library! I swear!"
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"I believe you honey. You're not in trouble."
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"Sit down, Jack!" his father snapped. That didn't sound like he
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wasn't in trouble. His parents sat on the edge of the bed, heads bowed.
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Jack slowly sat in the wicker chair opposite them and waited tensely. More
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silence. They didn't seem to know how to begin.
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Finally, his father looked at him. "Jack, do you remember when you
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were in science class, how you cloned those frog tadpoles?"
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"Yeah," he answered cautiously. "It was boring. We made frogs out of
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frogs."
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"Do you remember what you learned about cloning, son?"
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What in the world was this all about?* His parents surely didn't
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come up here to talk about science, did they? But he had to answer the
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question, blindly.
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"Well, small mammals can be cloned, like certain whales, and rats, I
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guess. Why?"
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His mother spoke, more composed now, but her eyes still red.
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"Jack...they can clone people, too."
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"People! Mom, you're being ridiculous! You even told me that last
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year. What are you talking about?"
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His father held up a hand to stop him. "Son, I know that's what all
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the books say. That cloning humans is far into the future. But there was a
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secret experiment nobody knows about, except us."
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Jack was pop-eyed. He waited for more.
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"Jack...the first human to be cloned...they had to have a baseline,
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son. It was a government-funded project...it-- it had to be somebody whose
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lifetime was known, somebody they could study. And ideally someone who had
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died prematurely, so they could see the genetic development, and-- and the
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impact of the environment."
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His father paused to give Jack a chance to absorb the information.
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But he was just blank. He couldn't understand what his father was telling
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him.
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"Son, when your mother told me you found that book about Kennedy, I
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knew the day we dreaded had arrived. Jack...you don't just look like him.
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You ARE him. You are an exact cloned duplicate of John F. Kennedy. Every
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single cell."
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"No! You're crazy, Dad! Mom! Have you both gone nuts! What's going
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on here!" His mother began to cry again.
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"It's true," she sobbed. "We-we didn't want to tell you, but we
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knew you would find out, someday."
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"I don't believe you! I'm not John F. Kennedy, I'm John Edward
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MacNamara!"
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His parents just stared at him. He stood looking back, in shock.
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And finally, his parents blurred into a veil of tears. They hugged
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him, crying, knowing it would never be the same again, that the illusion
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they wished to continue forever was, inevitably, over. The 16-year-old they
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had raised from a baby would never be the same again. Jackmac knew it too.
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Only he hadn't expected it to happen like this.
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___________________________________________________________________________
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Copyright 1992 by Jeff Epstein
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