CHAPTER TWENTY

There were so many options. I could aggravate them little by little each practice. I could continuously give them horrible music advice. Or I could lie low and wait until the first audition and then make sure it was a spectacular bomb.

In the middle of my heavy scheming that night, John met me in the living room of Mendips, his guitar strapped around his shoulder.

“Em, can I talk to ya?”

“Yeah, of course,” I said.

He tucked his thumb into his guitar strap. “Em, I was wonderin’, um… what do you think of that beetles name?”

My eyes bulged. “What?”

“For the band?” he asked. “’The Quarrymen’ doesn’t particularly fit us anymore since you’re a part of the group and all…”

“It’s not that great of a name,” I said with a nervous laugh. “I’m sure we can think of something better later.”

“Oh.” His face flushed. “Yeah, it’s a bit of a weird name, right?”

“So weird!” I said, my voice all high and tense. “It probably wouldn’t ever catch on.”

John inched a step closer to me and I felt like my knees were going to give out.

“I was also wondering, um…”  He brought his hands in closer to his chest. “If you wouldn’t mind teachin’ me your song. Strawberry Field?”

Oh, crapola. Well, that’s about the last thing that I wanted to have happen. John learning one of his best songs before his career even takes off.

He misinterpreted my hesitation. “It’s just that I usually sing lead.”

“I don’t know if that’s a good idea,” I said, spewing my words. “It’s not a very good song. I wrote it in like a day and I don’t think anyone would like it. It’s pretty bad.”

“I don’t care if anyone else in the whole world likes it or not,” he said. “I loved it, Em. Please, I really loved your song. I want to learn it.”

I struggled for the right response. Something discouraging but also attractive. Nothing. There was nothing. Finally, I sighed and closed my eyes.

“John, I want to be honest with you,” I said. “I didn’t write that song. I just used it because I wanted to win the argument.”

He jerked his head back. “Who wrote it?”

“Um, just some genius I know,” I said.

His eyebrows squished together. “How could some genius you know have written a song about the secluded orphanage down the road from my house?”

“Well, I might have changed the words a little. I think the real words were something like, Cadbury Feels. You know, like, ‘Cadbury Feels Forever’,” I sang.

“Does your friend have any other songs or records?” he asked.

I tucked my hands behind my elbows. “Sadly, no. Uh, he actually gave up his music career to propose to a girl he really liked.”

“That was a mistake.”

“Not for her!”

Another step closer to me. “Tell your friend if he writes like that, he ought to be making records and songs.”

“Mmm, mhm.”

I cupped my hand over my cheek. He was so close to me I could smell the Brylcreem in his hair and the Woodbine cigarettes on his shirt. John relaxed his posture, tilting his head to look at me with those dozy eyes.

“Do you want to step out with me?” he asked, his voice low.

I bit my lip. “Sure.”

I followed him out into the garden, far away from the house, so John could play his guitar and not bother the sharp-eared Mimi. He sat crossed legged in the grass and played.

Little dots covered the dark sky from top to bottom. I loved the ’58 stars. I had already been here for a couple of months, but I still couldn’t get over how many stars you could see from Earth at this point in time. I half wished Lennon weren’t around, so I could take some personal pictures for myself on my IND. But the other half of me ardently disagreed. The music that he was playing fit so perfectly with the night sky and I couldn’t ask for a better soundtrack.

John noticed me staring at the sky and stopped playing. “What is it?”

“The stars… I’ve never seen—” I stopped myself. “I’m still not used to them. They’re beautiful.”

He snorted. “They don’t have stars in America?”

“Not like this.”

Suddenly, John began to play and sing Little Star by The Elegants. I recognized the doowop and joined in which made him smile as he continued through the song. I knelt in the grass, close to John, but making sure we did not touch knees this time. Then after he had struck the last chord, we laughed politely at each other.

“Alright. You play something then.” He handed me his guitar.

I took it from him. What would I even play? If I picked another Beatle’s song, I might accidentally give him more great material. But I had one hundred- and fifty-years’ worth of songs to choose from and I couldn’t give him anything good.

I sighed to myself and sang for him the dumbest song that I knew how to play.

“There once was a piggy named Pete,

Who had no more use for his feet.

He said, ‘These slops ain’t for me! I long for the sea!’

And he sauntered downtown for a fleet.

He sold one of his legs to the butcher.

And one to the widow next door.

He traded the third for an old pirate ship

And the last one he gave to the poor.

OH! He had four pegs! Four pegs! Four pegs for legs!

He clomped around on the deck and he made such a mess,

For he was just a pig after all.”

John was grinning wildly from ear to ear. I stopped mid-strum. “You’re laughing at me.”

“Not at all,” he said. “I loved it!”

My expression soured. “Shut up! Don’t you ever get tired of being sarcastic all the time?”

“I’m completely serious,” he said, nudging me with his elbow. “I really loved it. I loved it even more than Strawberry Field.” 

“No, you didn’t!” I said.

“No, I didn’t.” He laughed. “But it was still very good. I liked it. I really did.”

I rested my chin on the guitar and pouted. “Everyone I’ve ever played that song for has told me that it’s the stupidest song they’ve ever heard.”

“Did they now? Well, probably because everyone you’ve ever played it for has had no concept of wit or irony or anything like that. Pearls before legless swine, Em.” John pushed the tip of his nose up and oinked a couple of times.

I hugged his guitar close to my body. If there were one person on Earth to tell me they liked the song, and it turned out to be one of the best song writers in the entire world, I guess that was pretty good.

 “I had a boyfriend at the time,” I said, no idea why I was saying it though. “He said it was the absolute worst thing he’s ever heard. That he couldn’t be with someone who would write a song like that.”

“Ah. Don’t be too hard on him, Em,” he said. “He can’t help being a big ugly scab who’s too thick to have a sense of humor.”

I laughed and slipped out from under the guitar. “He was too. Ugh! I was so embarrassed, I never played anything ever again!”

He shook his head and tsk tsk tsk’ed me. “You can’t please everyone. If you did, you’d end up in the middle with nobody liking you.”

I cocked my head. “Who said that?”

“John Lennon,” he said. “In the garden, just now. Didn’t ya hear me say it?”

I put my finger to my lip and furled my brow. “You’re right. I think you did say it,” I muttered under my breath. 

“If you love something. Really love something. You don’t ever, ever let that thing go. Not for a single solitary soul in the world. Because when you love something. That’s it. That’s everything. It’s all you need.”

“Love is all you need, huh?” I smirked. “I’m pretty confident John Lennon said that one too.”

“Ah, did he?” He shrugged a shoulder. “Smart man. You should listen to him once and a while, you know.”

I smiled and handed him back his instrument. “Alright, your turn again.”

“Hmm, let’s see here,” he said. John pretended to blow on each of his fingers and wiggled them wildly in the air before placing them on the strings of the guitar. Then he hit the first three chords of Ain’t She Sweet.

My heart completely stopped beating and dropped into my shoes. This was the sign. The song I had read about. The song he played for his first wife. And he was playing it for me with no one else around. Looking directly at me, staring right into my soul. His voice was all raspy and strained and rock and roll.

He had fallen for me.

Everything in my chest felt warm. I expanded my breath, but it only made everything inside burn brighter than before. He had captivated me, overwhelmed me. I couldn’t take my eye off John.

He softly ended the song. I crawled through the grass toward him. I picked up the bottom of his guitar and slipped underneath. Squeezing myself in between him and the guitar as I sat in his lap.

He looked at my lips.

“It’s getting harder to pretend like I don’t like you,” he whispered.

 “So don’t.”

He moved his hands from his instrument to either side of my waist and kissed me. The absolute best kiss I had ever had. John was right about Traegar, he was a hideous scab who was too thick to understand me or know how to kiss at all.

There are three types of kisses. One that is too disinterested. A quick peck you would give your grandma or something you would do out of obligation like on a stage or under a mistletoe. One that is too interested. As in they are more interested on the action that’s to follow than they are on the kiss. (And by that definition therefore are also disinterested.) But my kiss with John was the third type. A Goldilocks kiss. A sincerely interested and invested kiss, with all the passion in the world behind it.

When we had finally parted, I giggled awkwardly. I don’t know, I couldn’t help it, the pheromones were choking me.

“I like you,” John said in his simple blunt way.

“I like you too,” I said still giggling.

“I want you,” he whispered.

“I want you too,” I whispered back.

We kissed again. And yeah, alright, so that second kiss might have been a little too interested. At least on my part. But John didn’t let it go on long.

“I’m scared,” he said, with kind of a laugh in his voice. “I’m dead scared that it might not work out. With you not being from here and all.”

Ice rushed through my veins. “What?”

“From Britain, I mean.”

“Oh. Right.” Duh.

My eyes widened. This was it. I had him. He was right there in the palm of my hand and I could shove him deep inside my pocket and zip him inside.

“I could stay if I had a good reason,” I said. “For example, if I met someone and… if I had a big commitment to that someone… like they asked me to stay forever…”

His fingers curled tighter around my waist. “Em. I—”

Just then, the garden filled with light as the kitchen door opened. “John! Where are you?”

Aunt Mimi’s voice startled us both to kingdom come. I tried to jump backwards out of John’s arms but forgot the guitar had secured me to him. He must have forgot too, because somehow in the whole mess, the neck of the guitar smacked me in the head with a resounding thonk.

“Oh, sorry!” He tried to take the guitar off his shoulder, but the little tuning doodads snagged the back of my hair.

“Ow, ow, ow, wait stop!” I tripped and fell onto my hands and knees. He threw his head back and laughed.

“John, what is going on?” Mimi stepped out, wrapping a bath robe around her nightie. Her hair limp and loose around her face.

She got close enough to see me, on my knees, my snaggled hair wrapped around John’s guitar as he held it over me.

“What is all this about?” she asked with a stern and biting tone.

“I don’t know.” John lifted the belly of his guitar to examine the mess. “I just found my guitar like this all tangled up in a girl.”

I squinted my eye at him, my lips pursed and pinched. He had the biggest and happiest grin on his face.

“Do you suppose that’s how Elvis gets all his girls?” he asked. “Reels him in with his guitar when they cross through his garden?”

“I don’t want you out here reeling in girls until God knows what hour,” she snapped. “Get inside at once. And don’t give me any wit. I’m in no mood.”

We sheepishly retreated into the house, past a growling Mimi, who stopped at the bottom of the stairs to watch us and make sure there wouldn’t be any funny business.

We got to each of our bedroom doors respectively, John turned to me with a small smirk that made me want to jump him all over again.

“What are you doing tomorrow?” he asked. My loopy grin matched his as he leaned against his door frame. “And the next day? And the day after that?”

“Whatever you’re doing.”

“Lights out,” Mimi warned from the bottom of the stairs, like scolding an un-trained puppy by rubbing its nose in its mess.

John and I exchanged grimaces before we shut the door on each other. I turned around to face the little old stuffy room and brought my hands to my face. What had just happened? Well, it had happened. I had him. And he had me to be honest.

I dropped to the floor and squealed as quietly as I could. This flood of energy had knocked me over and I didn’t know what to do with it. Every detail was burning in my mind. The grass of the garden on my ankles. The sparkling stars. And that voice! The music! I could still feel his arms around me and smell the cream in his hair. He was mine.

A peppy and rhythmic knock came from John’s side of the wall. I skipped over and imitated the same knock back, letting him know that I was still thinking of him. I wasn’t just thinking, I was drowning in thoughts of him. I knew it was late, but I felt as though I would never sleep again. I was John Lennon’s girl. Now if only he would give up his music.

CHAPTER NINETEEN

I have to break up The Beatles. I have to break up The Beatles today.

As soon as the floorboard squeaked from John’s room, I leapt from my bed and swung my door open, catching him as he was about to walk downstairs and slip out.

“John!?”

He jumped about a half a foot in the air and slipped down a couple of steps. He caught himself on the railing and I ran to him.

 “Hey. What are you doing?” I asked calmly.

He clutched his chest. “Cripes, Em! The way you shouted my name. I thought someone was launching a grenade at me or something.”

“Oh. Sorry,” I said, my toes curling into my shoes. The same old socially inept Emmeline back at it again.

John smoothed back the sides of his hair. I felt that spark in my chest again and quickly looked away to get rid of it.

“I’m going to George’s,” he said. “Another group practice. The boys are back from holiday.”

Perfect. That was exactly the kind of thing that I needed to happen.

“Can I come?” I asked.

John’s mouth curled into a hesitant frown.

“I’ll behave this time. I promise,” I said, mentally crossing my fingers behind my back.

“Erm…” John rested against the wall of the stairwell and rubbed his neck. “You really like the record we made?” he finally asked.

I didn’t know what I was expecting him to say, but it wasn’t that.

“Yes, I loved it,” I confirmed.

“Alright.” John shrugged. “You can come round. I’m sure the group wouldn’t mind hearing about you loving the record and all that.”

I tried not to do that thing that I do. That thing where I pump my fist into my chest and hiss, ‘Yes!’. I tried not to do the thing. But it was like an involuntary muscle memory or something, my elbow bent, and my fingers closed into a celebratory fist.

He laughed at me, but I think it eased some of the awkward tension between us. I swallowed more sparks.

John and I walked to George’s together. I had grown to enjoy walking. In 2109 we always had transports available no matter where you were going. Even if it were to recycle a candy wrapper or something. You could just be whooshed away to the nearest vacuum receptacle. But here in 1950s England, everything was a lot slower. People took their time to get places, look at their surroundings, think and talk with the person at your side.

And that was another thing. I had grown to enjoy talking to John. I felt like with him, anything goes. You could talk about magical realms, serious world issues, or even just plants. Really any subject you could think to throw at him, he would have some opinion one way or the other. As if he had already thought about climbing a chocolate mountain or waging a war on the surface of the moon. It was as if he had already thought about everything there were to think about.

We got to sweet George’s, where his father welcomed us in warmly. Of all the adults I had met in this corner of time, I liked Mr. Harrison the best. Such a personable and good-mannered guy, just like his son. We went into the living room where everything was set up for the boys, except for poor Colin Hanton who had even less room for his drum kit than at Julia’s. He sat awkwardly behind everyone else and tapped his drum sticks on his knee to the beat.

I, again, took a seat on the sofa and listened to them play. I loved listening to them. Even if I had to pretend they were no good. It reminded me of the kind of music my mom listened to growing up. This genre called “Rebel”. The world had spent several decades using computers to make everything sound perfect and a few bands decided that they would go back to using real instruments and focusing on being as imperfect as they wanted. Ah! I loved that kind of music! It was the kind of music that made me feel like I could really be a singer songwriter. And John’s singing was absolutely reminiscent of “Rebel Rock”.

When the boys had finished, they turned to me.

“Well?” John asked.

I couldn’t help but smirk. Boom! Ready. I had a real game plan this time. It took me all night to concoct it, but I had figured out exactly what I would say and what opinion I would have.

“John, you were absolutely perfect,” I said.

His smile was half relieved and half flattered.

“But everyone else,” I grimaced. “I have to admit. They weren’t as strong as you, John. I don’t think they have the same kind of musical flare.”

A chorus of disputation erupted.

“Now, hold on there!”

“That simply isn’t true!”

“I may not be Chuck Berry, but I do just fine on me own!”

“SHUDDUP!” John yelled over all of them. They immediately fell silent. “We asked Emmeline her piece and she said her opinion. We can’t ask for any more than that.”

I shrugged. “I think you’d do better on your own as a solo musician, John. I’m not sure if you really need a band.”

“That’s enough of that!” Colin Hanton stood from his drum kit and put his sticks into his bag.

“What do you think you’re doin’?” John asked.

“I’m out. I’ve had enough. First, it’s this rock n’ roll. All you want to play is rock n’ roll. No skiffle. No jazz. No nothin’. Two fellas promised to beat me with my own sticks if I kept playing rock n’ roll with you at the Cavern. And in front of all them jazz fans. They don’t want to hear it, John.”

“I don’t give a half a shit what anyone wants to hear,” John said. “I play what I want to play.”

“That’s the problem alright,” Colin said and gestured to me. “And now you want to crowd us out, just because some bird has you by the rocks.”

John grabbed him by his shirt and yanked him in so close their noses were touching. “You can either leave quietly or skidding out of here on your arse!”

“Let go! You’re a madman!” Colin tore from Lennon’s grip and stormed out of George’s house. The front door slammed so loud a coocoo clock sounded unintentionally from the wall.

John’s angry eyes flickered from the door to me. Both George and Paul also threw me a seething glare.

“Sorry,” I said through the awkward silence.

“Is that it for us, then?” George asked sadly. “Are we disbanded?”

John resituated his guitar strap. “Of course not. We’ll just have to get better altogether, won’t we? Practice twice as hard.”

I slumped into the couch and huffed. What a backfire.

“And how are we going to do that, John?” Paul asked. “Our piano player and drummer are gone.”

“Yeah, we can’t have a band with three guitarists and nothing else,” George said.

“Why not?” John asked. “It’s called rhythm guitar isn’t it? It can keep rhythm fine without drums.”

George and Paul exchanged uneasy glances.

“We don’t need Colin!” John said loudly. “Or any of the others.”

“How many is that to quit, then?” Paul asked George aside.

“I think Colin makes fifty-eight now,” George joked.

John scrunched his face. “Right. That’s fine! I don’t care about the quitters. We’re going to the topper most of the popper most and no one is going to stop us!”

I felt that one. Like a strong punch to the gut, wishing that I hadn’t picked the most stubborn man in history to try and change.

“Well we ain’t going to the topper most of much anything with three guitars and nothin’ else,” Paul said, taking the guitar of his shoulder and leaning it against the wall.

Then it dinged on me. A brilliant Plan B.

“If you need someone else to join the band, I’d be more than happy to help,” I said, straightening in my seat. “I can play almost everything. Even drums if you need.”

A wave of complete shock blew through the room, like I had suggested that a chorus of chimpanzees dance behind them during their shows.

You could always count on John for a quick and blunt answer.

“No.”

My smile dropped. “What? Why not?”

“Because we get on just fine as it is.”

“Clearly.” I scoffed. “You need another musician and you have one sitting right in front of you. So, what’s the problem?”

Paul stumbled around, trying to think of the politest way to put it. “Well, yeah, I’m sure you’re very good, but it’s just that— and nothin’ against you, personally—”

“Girls don’t play rock n’ roll.” Again, John with the bluntness.

 My mouth hardened. “Okay, seriously? How can you say that John? I know how much you love The Shirelles.”

The other boys giggled, which made John at least crack a smile and shrug. “Yeah. So? That’s a different kind of group, isn’t it? They have their own group. And we have our group. And there’s no reason for a girl to be in ours. That’s all.”

My eyes narrowed at him. His smug little chin in the air, squinting back at me from his bat blind heavy eyes. I crossed my arms tight. “You think you’re so great, just because you’re a man? That men are so much better than women at everything.”

“I didn’t say that men are better at women than everything,” he said returning the crossed arm stance. “I said they’re better at rock n’ roll.”

Ooh. The nerve. “Oh, excuse me, Mr. Better-Than-You Lennon. You think you’re so great? I could write any song better than any of you and it wouldn’t even take me half as long to think up.”

“Oh, could you?” Lennon asked with a cheeky amused grin.

“Give me that guitar,” I said holding out my hand. “Give it to me!”

Lennon’s grin only widened. Like a cat playing with its food before it devours it. Or more like a whiny child playing with its food, spitting it out and throwing it on the floor.

I took his guitar and slung it around my shoulder. The backside was still warm from resting against his torso. As soon as I put my fingers on the strings, I realized how much of an idiot, I truly was.

What had I just set out to prove? That I was a better songwriter than Lennon-McCartney? I wasn’t better than most children. It was a stupid moment, but I had dug too deep to climb, so I rolled with it.

“Fine, you’re never going hear this one anyway,” I grumbled under my breath.

I took the guitar and cleared my throat a few times. I hadn’t performed in quite some time, but the weeks of rehearsing this song after my body armor surgery were going to pay off.  

“Won’t you take me down, ‘cause I’m going to,” I looked John in the eye. “Strawberry Fields.”

His face when he heard the reference to ‘Strawberry Field’, his brows almost shot off his hairline into space. I played the rest of the song as complete silence filled the living room. After I had hit the last “Strawberry Fields Forever”, the three stood staring at me not even gaping and gasping for words.

. I slowly slipped the guitar strap over my head. John came and took the instrument from me, his knees barely touching mine.

“So, am I in the band?” I asked. “What can I say, Em?” he asked, looking at Paul and George who nodded. “You’re in.”

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

The next two weeks were some of the most miserable of my life. John never left his room. And I was so riddled by grief and guilt that I tried not to either. I just couldn’t bear it. I couldn’t bear seeing him all empty like that again. And the silence. The awful, awful silence that filled this stuffy house. I couldn’t take it.

Some nights I would cover the crack under my door and fall asleep to Que’s home videos. Risky. More than once Aunt Mimi woke me with the vacuum outside in the hall and I always worried that she would find some reason to burst in unannounced. But I couldn’t help myself. I didn’t want to be in the quiet anymore. Listening to John and Mimi’s non reactions and my own horrible dreadful thoughts.

Sometimes in those quiet moments, I would remember this goldfish that I used to have. I named him Wolfgang Amadeus. And man, I was proud of that name. In his tank I had put a little piano and everything and I thought that was so funny and clever. I left for a weeklong VR music camp and when I came back one of his fins had gotten injured somehow and he couldn’t balance himself to swim. He would lie on his side at the top of the tank, floating as if he were dead.

Every day I would check to see if he were dead and he wasn’t. For weeks it was like that. Just floating and staring at me with his wide-open eye. His mouth painfully opening and closing. I remember wondering if I should take him to a vet. Or flush him to put him out of his misery. But I didn’t do anything. I let him float and float and float. Until he finally died.

I don’t know why I thought of Wolfgang during those shut in days at Mendips. Some days I would laugh thinking of a stupid goldfish. And then the laughing would make me feel sick to my stomach. Why would I laugh? I must be a sociopath.

Notifications piled in from Thorne. I didn’t respond to a single one. I wanted to call him a murderer and a traitor. Use the footage of him pulling a gun on me to press charges. Although, I felt in my gut that the time travel council would never back me up on that one.

One day, I forced myself to eat breakfast. I sat in the living room with a plate of cheddar cheese and plain crackers on my lap. The only thing I could stomach at the time. I heard the distinctive squeak of John’s floorboards in his bedroom. My chest tightened. We hadn’t had much of a conversation since I bawled at his side the day of his mother’s funeral.

He appeared in the doorway with a small portable record player under his arm.

“Hello,” he said quietly.

“John!” I shouted as if he had been lost at sea for several years or something.

“Are you doing anything at the moment, Em?” he asked.

The ‘Em’ part caught me. It was the first time that he had used my actual name. Well, part of my name at least.

“No. Nothing.” I pushed my plate of cheese and crackers behind a potted house plant. On the sly. Well, as sly as I could. I think Mimi may have caught of glimpse of what I was doing.

“I was wondering if you would fancy giving this a listen with me,” he said, holding a black album in its parchment cover. “It’s The Quarrymen. I haven’t listened to it much, with everything…”

“I understand,” I said nodding, not wanting to say it out loud either. “I would love to listen to that with you, of course.”

“No, not in here you don’t,” Aunt Mimi burst in. “Take it to the porch.” 

“Right. Sorry, Mimi,” John said, bundling the record under his arm.

Honestly, I could have exploded at that woman. I had put up with a lot of her attitude since moving here, but that one sent a flaming spark through me. And I clenched my fists to keep from giving her a piece of my mind.

Here was your own nephew, basically your son, completely traumatized and scarred and depressed. And all he wanted was to share his raw God-given talent with you, a talent that would be worth a billion dollars if it weren’t for me. And you had to go and turn him away like that. Shame on you and your nasty quiet museum of a house.

“Come along then,” John said, tilting his head toward the front door.

I hopped up, making sure to leave my dirty cheese and crackers plate behind the plant. I should have picked a stinkier, sharper cheese to plague her with. Oh, well.

I followed John to the front porch, a little boxed in room with beautiful tulips and roses in stained glass on each window. John sat on the black and white checkerboard floor and pulled the black vinyl from its sleeve.

“Paul’s coming for this, you see,” he explained. “Each of us are going to take a week with it. I had it first. Then Paul, then George, and so on and so forth, see? Seventeen six this cost us! Here, have a look.”

He tossed me the record. When I caught it, my heart constricted. Their very first recording. This was without a doubt the most expensive thing I had ever touched. (Second, I guess if you count the portal. And third, I guess if you count the time that John touched my hand.) Millions of dollars in my hands. All in perfect crisp, clean and new quality.

I suddenly understood why Thorne had made such a big deal of souvenirs vs. samples. This wouldn’t be too hard to smuggle. One trip to the dark market with this and I’d never have to work another day again. I could go back into music. I could do whatever the hell I wanted.

“Wow, it’s really nice,” I said gently handing the vinyl back to John.

“Now, how do you know it’s nice if you haven’t even heard it?” John asked, smirking. “I’ll put it on and then tell me what you think.”

John spun the record in between his two hands and that made my whole body clench. He placed it on the player and set the needle on it. In Spite of All the Danger rang into the foyer.

It was kind of weird pretending like I hadn’t heard that song a few dozen times. As we listened John watched me intently with this thumbnail in his mouth. Occasionally, he would break in with “I hadn’t gotten enough air on that bit.” Or “I would have changed this if they hadn’t given us only a quarter of an hour.”

After that song had ended, he flipped the vinyl over and played the B side, That’ll Be the Day. Finally, when that song had ended, John held his breath. “Well, Em, what do you say?”

It was clear that he was nervous and anxious about what I thought. Imagine that. But here I was in a conundrum because before now I had always discouraged any little effort that John had put into his music. Like a cold and unforgiving Aunt Mimi. But this time I couldn’t do that. I didn’t want to do that. It had gotten me nowhere romantically and all it had done was push John away. I knew Thorne was watching and I knew he was actively disapproving of everything I was doing. But maybe I didn’t care. And I certainly didn’t want to follow Thorne to his capital T anymore.

“I loved it,” I said, being truthful with John for the first time since meeting him. “I loved it so much. I think your cover of Holly’s song is better than the original.”

“You’re having me on!”

“Really. And the chorus of In Spite of All the Danger is genius! Especially for someone of your age to write—”

“Well, Paul wrote that one,” John said sliding the vinyl into its cover. “And George came up with the guitar solo.”

“Oh, really? Well, still, your voice. I—”

John beamed at me, but I had to stop myself. I was giving him too much. Digging an open grave. If I kept going, I would never be able to convince him that he should give it up. Especially give it up for me. Why would he?

“But you know, you’re also a fantastic artist. I think that’s where your talent really lies,” I said, hating every inch of myself.

His smile dropped. “Yeah,” was all he said.

“Or your writing, I mean…” I choked on the lump in my throat. “There are so many other things you can do in this world than being the lead singer of The Beatles, John.”

“Of the what?”

I clamped my mouth shut. How could I have been so stupid? It was the most rookie mistake in all of time traveling. It wasn’t enough just to know history, but you had to actively know history and be consistent with your time period. This was a bad one. Thorne was going to lose his mind.

“Did you say, ‘beetles’?” he asked.

“No. I don’t know what I just said.” I was dying inside. Dying!

“How did you know I wanted to change the name of the band?”

“I didn’t.” No really, I didn’t. I didn’t think he was thinking of a name like that until his Hamburg years.

John kept pressing. “How did you know I wanted to use an insect name?”

“Sure, like Buddy Holly and The Crickets,” I said.

John’s jaw dropped. “Yes!”

“Yeah,” I shrugged.

“But how did you know?” he asked, his voice getting all high pitched.

I stood to my feet. Reaching for anything that I could use to get myself out of this hole. I finally settled for, “You must have told me about it.”

John shook his head. “I haven’t told anyone about that. I haven’t even told the lads about that.”

“Then how else would I know?” I asked. I could tell by John’s face that I was completely blowing his mind. So, I slipped in another little nugget for myself. “You must really care for me, to confide something like that with me.”

His heavy dark brows furrowed together as he studied the checkerboard floor. I could hear the gears in his head whirring. Finally, he shook it off.

“I’m going to step out for some air,” he said. “Do you want to go somewhere with me?”

“Yes!” I said. “I would like that very much.”

We left Mendips together and walked through the little alley way behind the house. John was talkative and it felt so good. So good to hear him talk. I had missed his voice. And I don’t mean singing, but just hearing him joking away. His voice had left a big gaping space inside of me when it had slipped away.

“Let me take you on a tour of ye ol’ Liddypool,” John said and gestured widely through the street. “Now, Em. This here is a normal everyday tree. I don’t know how familiar you are with trees in America. But here, Liverpool is full of them. All leafy and stick-like.”

I snorted and rolled my eyes. 

“Ah, here is a place I used to come to as a wee little Jimmykin. Now, in those days, I wasn’t allowed to play here. And I had to hop the fence, you see? And now, in these days, I’m still not allowed to play here and I’m still going to have to hop the fence.”

My smile slowly melted into awe as we arrived at the big red iron gates of Strawberry Field. 

“John,” I whispered.

“There’s nothing to be squeamish about, Em. This old gate doesn’t bite,” he said grabbing the railing and rattling the fence. “It’s a boy’s and girl’s home. Which suits us because I’m a boy and you’re a girl. So, make yourself at home.”

He lifted himself up on the elaborate swirls and ironwork of the famous gate and started to climb. Now you have to understand that for me, a musician, and a history buff, this was an incredible thing to happen. To sneak into Strawberry Field with John Lennon. The very field from his childhood that inspired him to write one of his best songs. Let’s just say, I was geeking the Galactica out.

I followed him without hesitation.

The cold metal gate was easy to climb despite the bright red slippery pattern. I had to maneuver carefully through the iron spires on the top. But hopping the fence was second nature to John who made it up and down like a monkey on a ladder.

  The grounds were beautiful, and I had never seen such big full foliage. I know John was joking about the trees only being in Liverpool, but there really was something to say about how green the past was. I was forever in awe of it.

John shushed me as we moved through the thick woods and muddy paths that led through the property, I could see a mansion far off. Children’s faint laughter and shouting came from that way. We stayed on the outskirts, keeping sure that no one would know that we were there.

He led me to a garden, nestled behind a group of oak trees, isolated from the rest of the grounds. We sat together and talked, I could hear the rustle of the leaves as the warm breeze blew across my face and tickled my hair against my neck. It felt good to be out of the fish boiling house of Mendips and into the open. And it felt even better just to be with John.

After a while of non-stop chatter from the both of us, we laid next to each other in the tall grass and watched the big, fluffy clouds creep across the sky.

Soon John became quiet. I could see him falling back into himself like he had been for the past couple of weeks. I panicked. What could I say that would help him? What could I say that would bring him out of this?

“John?”

He turned his head to me, his eyes squinting in the sun. There was nothing. I couldn’t think of anything at all to say.

“Um, I—”

His eyebrow raised, still squinty from the harsh summer light. I had this moment, this horrible realization of how awful I was with boys. How I never have successful conversations with boys. Boys never liked me. Boys never thought I was interesting or worth pursuing. I was disenchanting.

I sighed heavily and huffed onto the ground in defeat.

“Why was World War I so fast?” I asked.

John still looked at me with one eye closed. “Why? Because they were all Russian?”

I couldn’t hold back my gasp. Then in complete shock, a sharp laugh burst out of me.

 “World War II was a lot slower then. They must have been Stalin,” he added.

This balloon of excitement burst inside of my chest. Sweet, sweet vindication. Stupid AI Lennon bot doesn’t know a darn thing about anything!

“Maybe that’s why the Dark Ages were so dark,” I said, rolling onto my stomach. “You know, all the knights.”

John gave me a silent laughing smile that scrunched up his nose.

I rested my chin on my arm. His thick eyelashes and light brown eyes caught the sun. And his thick coarse hair had bits of grass tangled inside. Things had gotten quiet again, but not in the same way. This time we were looking at each other. I could feel the fingertip of his pinky accidentally brushing against mine.

Uh oh.

I knew this feeling. The little giddy pinpricks at the top of my chest and the unintentional smile. This wasn’t just a glimmer of attraction. This was the feeling you get when you think about someone a lot. The feeling when you start planning your outfits to that someone’s taste. When you start planning your life around that someone’s whereabouts.

I had caught myself right in the middle of that feeling and I threw a box of baking soda on that fire.

“Wall of glass,” I said aloud.

“What’s that?” John asked, leaning forward.

I jumped to my feet. “I… I have to go.”

John looked at me in total confusion. He probably thought a bee stung me I had hopped up so fast.

“Don’t go, we just got here.”

Again, the feeling. Again, the extinguisher. Go away. Go away. Stop! I internally screamed at my own heart.

“Sorry John. It’s just that I… I have to go. I forgot that I… that I have to go.”

John rolled to a sitting position. “Alright. Let me walk you back.”

“No, that’s okay! Um, that’s okay.” I quickly brushed the grass off my tweed skirt. “You stay here. You just got here. You should stay. Really. I’m fine.”

His eyes bounced around as if he were trying to put together the sudden and abrupt turn of events. “Was it something I said?”

“No, not at all. Um, kind of the opposite actually,” I said.

“Huh?”

I grimaced. “Don’t worry about it. I’m fine. Everything’s fine. Everything’s… great. I’ll— I’ll talk to you again, later.”

I beat it out of there, half-running on the uneven mud trail between the giant oak trees. I could hear John call after me from the hidden garden. “Em, wait!”

I didn’t. I couldn’t. I was full on taking Dr. Greggs advice and I was getting myself the Galactica out of there. I huffed and puffed all the way through the back alley, into Aunt Mimi’s garden, through the little kitchen, around the corner and up the stairs. Not stopping or slowing at any point during the journey. I slammed my bedroom door shut and clawed at my face.

Alright, Emmeline. Take a deep breath and think things through. Be logical now.

I consciously slowed my breaths and sat on the bed. Alright. That had been a fluke. I was just excited because of all the historical meaning behind it. And not because of John himself or anything like that. Yeah. That’s right. It had all been a little fluke.

My reflection blushed in that full-length mirror. Dr. Thorne was watching me in all my awkward glory. And how would I even explain this erratic behavior? No matter what I told him, I would not tell him about the weird little fleeting feeling that I had. Anything that would suggest I was getting too close would be enough of an excuse for Thorne to consider the mission compromised and take over.

So, no. He would never find out. John’s life depended on it.

I couldn’t get personally involved like that. I mean I was there to get involved, but not involved involved. I had to be twice as careful now. I would focus on breaking up the band. No more miss nice girl. The band had to go. It had to.

 I looked at my hands, still dirty from playing at Strawberry Field. The image of laughing and joking with John was tainted with the image of aiming my gun at his AI and pulling the trigger. Not to mention the image of Julia laughing and dancing with him by the piano. That memory was especially clear. I slipped my shoes off and crawled into bed all dusty from sitting outside. The house was shrieking quiet again and I hated it. I turned on the videos from Que and tried to remove myself from John.


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