Wheel."
"Twenty years old," he repeated, and his vision blurred with gratitude to whatever power had brought him to this place, this time, this miraculous passage.
He wasn't merely being given a second chance. This was a shot at
whole new beginning.
"All I've got to do is the right thing," he said. "But how will I know what it is?"
Rain beat, beat, beat on the car with all the fury of judgment drums.
Moving her hand from his cheek, smoothing his rain-soaked hair back from his forehead, Celeste said, "Your turn."
"What?"
"I told you what year it is. Now you're supposed to explain everything."
"Where do I start? How do I ... make you believe?"
"I'll believe," she softly assured him.
"One thing I know for sure: Whatever I've been brought back here to do, whatever I'm supposed to change, you're at the center of it. You're the heart of it. You're the reason that I have hope for a new life, and any better future I might have hinges on you."
As he'd spoken, her comforting hand had withdrawn from him. Now she held it over her heart.
For a moment the girl seemed unable to breathe, but then she sighed and said, "You get stranger by the minute ... but I'm starting to like it."
"Let me see your hand."
She took her right hand from her heart and turned it palm up.
The dome light was still on, but even that didn't provide enough light for him to read the meaning of the stigmata.
"Give me the flashlight," he said.
Celeste handed it to him.
He switched on the beam and studied both her palms. The wounds had been fading when last he'd looked. Now they were deep again and oozing blood.
Reading the reawakened fear in his face, she said, "What do you see, Joey?"
"Nail holes."
"There's nothing."
"Bleeding."
"There's nothing in my hands."
"You can't see, but you've got to believe."
Hesitantly, he touched her palm. When he raised his finger, the tip of it glistened with her blood.
"I can see it. I can feel it," he said. "It's so frighteningly real to me."
When he looked at her, she was staring wide-eyed at his crimson fingertip. Her mouth was an oval of surprise. "You ... you must've cut yourself."
"You can see it?"
"On your finger," she confirmed, a tremor in her voice.
"In your hand?"
She shook her head. "There's nothing on my hands."
He touched another finger to her palm. It came away wet with her blood.
"I see it," she said tremulously. "Two fingers."
Transubstantiation. The precognitive vision of blood in her hand had been transformed by his touch - and by some miracle - into the real blood of her body.
She touched the fingers of her left hand to the palm of her right, but they found no blood.
On the radio, Jim Croce - not yet dead in a plane crash - was singing "Time in a Bottle."
"Maybe you can't see your own fate by looking at yourself," Joey said. "Who of us can? But somehow ... through me ... through my touch, you're being ... I don't know ... being given a sign."
He gently pressed a third finger to her palm, and it too came away slick with blood.
"A sign," she said, not fully grasping what was happening.
"So you'll believe me," he said. "A sign to make you believe. Because if you don't believe me, then I might not be able to help you. And if I can't help you, I can't help myself."
"Your touch," she whispered, taking his left hand in both of hers. "Your touch." She met his eyes. "Joey ... what's going to happen to me ... what would have happened if you hadn't come along?"
"Raped," he said with total conviction, although he didn't understand how he knew. "Raped. Beaten. Tortured. Killed."
"The man in the other
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