Stealing Time Read online




  STEALING TIME

  Rebecca Bowyer

  Story Addict Publishing

  MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA

  First published 2021 by Story Addict Publishing.

  P.O. Box 11, Croydon, Victoria 3136 Australia

  storyaddict.com.au

  Copyright © 2021 by Rebecca Bowyer.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, write to the publisher, addressed “Attention: Permissions Coordinator,” at the address above.

  Publisher’s Note: This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are a product of the author’s imagination. Locales and public names are sometimes used for atmospheric purposes. Any resemblance to actual people, living or dead, or to businesses, companies, events, institutions, or locales is completely coincidental.

  Book cover design by RockingBookCovers.com

  Stealing Time/Rebecca Bowyer -- 1st ed.

  ISBN 978-0-6485323-3-0 (pbk)

  ISBN 978-0-6485323-4-7 (ebook)

  A catalogue record for this book is available from the National Library of Australia.

  To all those who’d desperately like a few more hours to magically appear in their day.

  Chapter one

  Varya

  Varya looked up from the stove and smiled as her friend deposited her handbag on the hall stand and shrugged off her jacket.

  “Long day?” she asked.

  “You could say that.” Zoe slumped onto a bar stool beside Daniel and peered over his shoulder. “History?”

  Daniel frowned and rounded his shoulder, blocking his device from his mother’s view.

  “Just a novel. With Greek gods,” he mumbled. Without taking his eyes off the screen, he pushed the stool back from the counter, stood up, and wandered out of the kitchen.

  Zoe smiled and watched him leave, perfectly navigating around furniture and through the doorway to his bedroom, without even needing to lift his eyes.

  “His peripheral vision must be extremely well developed.” She turned back to Varya. “So, honey, what’s for dinner?”

  Varya threw a tea towel at her. “Nothing, if you keep that up.”

  “Well, it smells good. Thanks for looking after Daniel. Need me to do anything?”

  “No, it’s fine.” Varya turned to the stove.

  Zoe studied her back. “How was your day? Everything okay at work?”

  “Work’s fine.”

  “They found a cure yet?”

  Varya smiled faintly. “Not yet. Getting closer.”

  It was Zoe’s standard attempt to penetrate her friend’s thought bubble. Somehow, it always worked, always got her attention.

  One day there would be a cure for the disease that had taken Varya’s four-year-old son. Varya hoped she would be a part of the discovery; it was what she’d spent twelve-hour days working towards. But some days, cleaning benches, noting observations and laying out instruments didn’t feel much like contributing. The process of medical research was so damned slow.

  “How about you? Save any lives today?”

  Zoe’s face clouded. “We lost a kid today. Five-year-old little girl. Cancer.”

  “I’m sorry.” Varya wanted to hug her but knew better than to try to offer physical comfort. Zoe needed her space, to be able to maintain her composure in the face of tragedy. It was the only way she managed to continue working as a palliative care paediatrician at the Gillard Memorial Hospital.

  “She was ready to go. We were having trouble managing her pain in the end. She was tired.” Zoe paused and swallowed. “It’s the parents, afterwards, that’s the hardest part to deal with. It’s a relief for the child, when death comes, but the parents... they’re the ones who get left behind. Their suffering never really ends.”

  Varya gripped the bench to stop the world from spinning and slow her own breathing.

  “But you know all this, I don’t need to tell you.” Zoe met Varya’s eyes and they exchanged a moment of raw pain before Zoe shook her head.

  “But that’s all far too morbid for a Monday evening. When can we eat? I’m starving.”

  “Lemongrass and chilli stir fry tonight,” Varya announced, a little too loudly. She turned away from Zoe to stir the sizzling contents of the pan.

  “Smells wonderful. Chicken?”

  She shrugged. “They were out of beef again. Maybe next month, they reckon. I get lectured every time I ask for it, you know. Bad for the environment, plant-based beef substitute tastes practically the same…”

  “Chicken is good. Or tofu, even. So long as we can still get a steak every now and then. A girl needs her steak, you know, no matter the emissions.” She went to the fridge and pulled out a half-empty bottle of white wine. Varya shook her head as Zoe held it up to her, eyebrows raised.

  “Might help you relax a little. A glass a day won’t harm you.”

  “Vineyards are better for the environment than beef, at least,” said Varya, ignoring her friend’s offer as she pulled bowls out from the cupboards.

  “How are you sleeping these days?” Zoe sat at the counter and poured herself a small glass, taking a small sip and studying Varya.

  “Fine,” said Varya, without meeting her eye.

  “You seem tired, is all.”

  “Well, alcohol won’t help that. It’ll just make me more tired.” Varya turned back and started to serve the rice, two scoops per bowl. Then she moved them to the pan and scooped the meagre rations of chicken on, drizzling extra sauce over the top before placing the three bowls in a row on the counter.

  “Daniel! Dinner!” she called out, before making her way around the counter and taking her place two seats away from Zoe.

  The two women watched as Daniel came loping out, his impossibly long, skinny limbs flailing around in alarming proximity to the door frame. He slumped down in the chair between them and shovelled food into his mouth with alarming speed.

  Zoe smiled and shook her head. They ate in silence for a few minutes. She took her opportunity to pounce as Daniel paused in his shovelling to take a drink of water.

  “So, anything interesting happen at school today?”

  Daniel looked up at her in mild surprise, as though he’d forgotten she was there.

  “A kid’s gone missing, one of the kids in the other class. Ben Williams.”

  Varya put her fork down and tried to swallow her mouthful but her throat had already started to clench.

  “Missing?” Zoe pushed her hair back. “You mean he’s away, sick? Or he’s moved schools?”

  Daniel shook his head. “Nope. Never came home last night. Police are out looking for him. His mum was at the school this morning, crying.”

  Zoe and Varya exchanged an anxious glance.

  “That poor woman,” murmured Zoe.

  “Do they have any idea where he might have gone?” asked Varya.

  Daniel shook his head. “Nope. They’ve tried everyone. CCTV footage, all of it. He’s vanished somewhere between school and home.”

  “Well, I’m sure he can’t have gone far. Maybe he went camping, or just decided to have some time to himself. I’m sure he’ll be found soon, okay?” Varya scooped up a spoonful of rice and held it between her bowl and mouth purposefully.

  Daniel looked at her, expressionless.

  “Sure,” he muttered. He continued eating, sneaking curious glances at Varya from time to time.

  It had seemed like the right thing to do, offering to help
Zoe care for Daniel. Sometimes Varya wondered whether she’d tried too hard over the years, whether her near-constant presence might make Zoe feel pushed to the side, or whether Zoe had seen it as a ready excuse to bury herself in work. Caring for other people’s children while Varya cared for hers. Both women worked non-standard hours. Between them, they ensured Daniel always had someone to greet him at home after school.

  Zoe had lost her husband to a rare autoimmune disease and needed help to care for Daniel while she continued working shifts at the hospital to support them. Varya needed to be near someone who understood the grief she suffered at losing her son. She couldn’t work twenty-four hours a day at the lab, not without raising suspicion. Especially in the evening hours, time stretched out. She’d felt like she was rattling around her own apartment, after her husband had left.

  After Kir was gone.

  Varya had taken Kir home from the hospital towards the end. The known treatments had failed. The experimental ones had been stopped in their early stages. There were no clinical trials for Kir to be enrolled in, no final attempts, no long shots. His condition was rare and, as such, the bean counters who held the medical research purse strings had deemed there to be insufficient public interest to invest in a cure. The dollars were being spent on furthering stem cell research for more common childhood cancers.

  And so, Kir had come home.

  Zoe had watched it all happen. She’d worked on the same ward, but with different patients. She’d spoken in soft tones to Varya in the tearoom. She understood the pain of being told your loved one didn’t deserve a chance to live. They bonded over their anger at the system’s failure. Before Kir was discharged for good, Zoe gave Varya medications to keep him comfortable. Medications which, she told her newfound friend—out of ear shot of other staff—if Kir became too distressed, could end his pain altogether at the right dosage. Zoe whispered a number in her ear. Varya clenched her fists, fought back tears, and silently noted it.

  By then, Kir’s father had left, taken a promotion up at the naval base just outside Canberra. Sebastian and Varya had fallen out over their son’s medical treatments. The months of illness had taken their toll on an already strained marriage. Kir was not going to live, Sebastian told her, what was the point of putting him through the pain and distress of more treatments when it was fruitless? Sebastian wanted to spend the final days with his son as happily as they could, and then move on. Varya was determined to eke out every extra day she possibly could with the only son she would ever have. One child per woman, that was the law to contain the population and preserve precious and dwindling natural resources.

  They had to try, she said.

  No, they didn’t, he said.

  In the end, he left. He took a week off after quitting his job in Melbourne and spent his own final days with Kir, the way he wanted to.

  And then he was gone. Varya hadn’t heard from Sebastian since. Not during the dark days when Kir shivered in the hospital bed at Gillard Memorial with tubes attached, not when she held his head through the night at home while he vomited the contents of his tiny four-year-old stomach onto the mass of towels she kept by his bed.

  And then Kir was gone, too.

  Later that evening, after the dishes were stacked in the dishwasher and Daniel had retired to his room to chat to his friends and shoot things in his online gaming world, Zoe poured herself another glass of wine and sat, staring at the subway-tiled splashback. One hand rested on her mini screen. Varya gave the bench one final wipe and came to sit next to her friend.

  “I’m sure that kid’ll be alright.”

  Zoe turned to her, frowning. “Are you?”

  “He’s probably just wandered off. You know what kids are like these days.”

  “I do. And usually they leave some sort of sign before they decide to take off. A note. A packed backpack. They take their screens with them.” Zoe cut herself off and lifted her glass to her lips, taking a large gulp of wine.

  “He didn’t take anything with him? Daniel told you that?”

  Zoe had spoken to Daniel in his bedroom while Varya was cleaning up from dinner. The conversation fragments that drifted into the kitchen had started out fluid and upbeat, then became monosyllabic and sparse. By the time Zoe had returned to her seat at the bench she was withdrawn and silent.

  “No, Daniel didn’t tell me. I read it online.” Zoe tapped her screen, staring at it but not focusing.

  This was not a good sign, thought Varya.

  “There hasn’t been a child abduction in over a decade,” said Zoe. “All that stopped, it was supposed to have stopped with the arrests, the destruction of the technology, the improvements they made to the Rest Time Chips. They’re tamper-proof now.” She rubbed at her neck as the words rushed out, swirling together in a cloud of anxiety.

  Varya frowned and stared at the back of Zoe’s neck, the tiny scar visible now, with her hair swept to the side. She knew her own neck carried a similar light pink nick, where her Time Chip had been inserted. Sixty-five years, that was the maximum time allowed to each person in modern-day Australia. Assuming they stayed out of trouble, worked their allotted hours, and had one child—only one—to get the maximum Time Chip extensions granted.

  But ten years ago, some people had become greedy. They’d discovered a way to steal time from other people. And who had more time to be stolen than a young child? For several months, the time thieves had terrorised the eastern seaboard from Maroochydore to Melbourne. Until Varya had helped to stop them.

  She didn’t want to think about those dark times when children couldn’t be let out of their parent’s sight for even a second. She shuddered at the memory of children suddenly reappearing on the doorsteps of frantic households. The footage of joyful reunions shattered just seconds later as the child collapsed in their parent’s arms—the years, weeks and minutes stripped away from them. It was a bittersweet torture, this precise theft of time. The time thieves left just enough time for one final greeting; just enough time to build up hope again before the child was then torn away forever, the Time Chip’s termination sequence activated decades too early.

  After two or three such traumatic returns, the parents of newly abducted children had become wise. They just held onto their babies for dear life when they came back, clutching them while they were still warm and could hug them back.

  After several dozen abduct-and-returns, the grief was immediate. In one infamous case, the mother refused to open the door to her returned child. CCTV footage showed a thirteen-year-old girl banging her fists on the door, shouting for her mother to let her in. Her father later revealed that he ran from the backyard into the house, where his wife sat with her back against the front door, sobbing uncontrollably. She simply couldn’t face watching her daughter die. The father had tried to move her, but she wouldn’t budge. When the banging subsided, she raised the handgun she’d concealed at her side, and shot herself.

  Varya shook her head. “Kids go missing for other reasons. It’s not always about time. He might have had an argument with someone and wandered off and got lost. You know how unpredictable pre-teens can be.”

  Zoe clutched the stem of her newly re-filled wine glass. “Oh, come on, Varya. Daniel’s in his room. He can’t hear us, there’s no need to sanitise this. Besides, even he doesn’t believe you. He’s nine years old, he’s not a baby.”

  Varya flinched. She knew Zoe was right, but she wished she could still tell Daniel whatever made-up version of events would make him feel safe at night, and have him believe her. When had that changed? Two years ago, three? They grew up so fast, lost their faith in adults so quickly. Then again, when adults lied on a daily basis—often even to themselves—it was hardly surprising.

  “Fifty-five years on the clock, he had left. That’s a lot of years to sell, a lot of money, and a big motive.” Zoe looked at Varya. “What’s to say it’s not happening again?” Her voice held an uncharacteristic note of panic.

  Zoe had worked in the emergency depart
ment in the early days when the time thieves had been less precise. Half a dozen children had been returned with enough time left on their Chips to make it to the hospital. Their parents would rush them in, screaming for the Time Chip to be taken out. Zoe and her colleagues had been powerless to do anything except give the family some privacy in their final moments. No Time Chip had ever been removed without causing death to the host. At least the children’s deaths were peaceful ones, as the initiators were designed to provide, unlike some of the traumas inflicted on other children brought into the E.R. But what could be truly peaceful about the death of a young child who had barely had the chance to live?

  Eventually the perpetrators had been caught. A criminal cell harbouring a fourth-dimension physicist who had worked on the time exchange projects and couldn’t let go of the prospect of immortality or—at the very least—old age. He and his co-conspirators had been put to death the old-fashioned way: by lethal injection. The time theft technology they’d used had been retrieved and destroyed. Varya knew Ben Williams couldn’t have been taken by time thieves. The Rest Time initiators were absolutely tamper-proof and the consequences for developing technology to override them were both swift and brutal.

  Besides, there was nobody left who even knew how to effect a time transfer. Except for Varya. And her former Time Corps colleague, Reginald Baker.

  Varya focused on Zoe’s wine glass and decided she was thirsty after all.

  Chapter two

  Marisa

  “It’s not about how much time you have available to you, it’s about how you use that time to its full potential.”

  “Bullshit,” Marisa muttered to the well-suited television presenter as she fanned out forty hours’ worth of time tabs on the low table in front of her. “Time is money, and money has always been able to buy more time.” Although usually what people meant was that you could pay someone else to clean your house, or get your groceries, or execute any one of your millions of smaller chores, to free up time for yourself. So then you could spend that extra thirty minutes a day doing a high-intensity workout to keep your body healthy instead, and twenty minutes meditating to keep your mind healthy, and ninety minutes reading or doing crossword puzzles to optimise your brain synapses.