INKR Logo

RetroActive

RetroActive • Retroactive, Part 2 • Page ik-page-4383343
Retroactive, Part 2
This is a locked chapterRetroactive, Part 2
About This Chapter
Back in upstate New York, the narrator is finally able to track down the plane. He's been waiting weeks to get there, and now he's finally at a memory care facility. The place is "filthy," the narrator tells his mom, but it's a good place for people who need a place to go. The narrator wants to go back to his own home, where his father was killed in a car crash. He doesn't want his mom to live at the memory care place. He wants to be able to go home with his sister, who was in the car accident. He tells her that she would never do such a thing to him. She's not the only one who found the place, and she's the one who was responsible for finding it. He says that if they had, they would have sent someone else to undo it, but if they didn't, it would have been a disaster. He believes that the Bta saved thousands of lives by returning to the scene of the crash to stop it from happening. He also says that sometimes he wonders what keeps them from becoming "isacs," or "whiplash," as he likes to call them. Sometimes, he wonders if there's something about the way he remembers things that keeps him from becoming an "acs." The narrator says that when he feels like he is slipping, he checks his memory to see if he remembers what's going on. He then goes back to New York City, where he'll have to wait in a hospital for a while before he can get back to the post. He has to go to a nearby parking lot, where the driver of a truck will
Close Viewer
INKR Logo

RetroActive

RetroActive • Retroactive, Part 2 • Page ik-page-4383343
Retroactive, Part 2
This is a locked chapterRetroactive, Part 2
About This Chapter
Back in upstate New York, the narrator is finally able to track down the plane. He's been waiting weeks to get there, and now he's finally at a memory care facility. The place is "filthy," the narrator tells his mom, but it's a good place for people who need a place to go. The narrator wants to go back to his own home, where his father was killed in a car crash. He doesn't want his mom to live at the memory care place. He wants to be able to go home with his sister, who was in the car accident. He tells her that she would never do such a thing to him. She's not the only one who found the place, and she's the one who was responsible for finding it. He says that if they had, they would have sent someone else to undo it, but if they didn't, it would have been a disaster. He believes that the Bta saved thousands of lives by returning to the scene of the crash to stop it from happening. He also says that sometimes he wonders what keeps them from becoming "isacs," or "whiplash," as he likes to call them. Sometimes, he wonders if there's something about the way he remembers things that keeps him from becoming an "acs." The narrator says that when he feels like he is slipping, he checks his memory to see if he remembers what's going on. He then goes back to New York City, where he'll have to wait in a hospital for a while before he can get back to the post. He has to go to a nearby parking lot, where the driver of a truck will
Close Viewer