Book Creator

Restart

by Gordan Korman

Pages 8 and 9 of 329

Loading...
 That’s when it happens. I reach back for an image of Mom and come up totally empty.

  Ditto Dad or home or friends or school or anything.

  It’s the craziest feeling. I remember how to remember, but when I actually try to do it, I’m a blank. I’m like a computer with its hard drive wiped clean. You can reboot it and the operating system works fine. But when you look for a document or file to open, nothing’s there.
  Not even my own name.

  “Am I—Chase?” I ask.

  While my other questions sent murmurs of shock around my hospital bed, this one is greeted with silent resignation.

  My eyes fall on the chart in the doctor’s hands. On the back of the clipboard is written AMBROSE, CHASE.

  Who am I?

  “A mirror!” I exclaim. “Somebody give me a mirror!”

  “Perhaps you’re not ready for that,” the doctor says in a soothing tone.

  The last thing I’m in the mood for is to be soothed. “A mirror!” I snap.

  The lady who calls herself Mom 
fumbles inside her pocketbook and hands me a makeup compact.

  I open it up, blow away the loose powder, and stare at my reflection.

  A stranger stares back at me.
Loading...


  Amnesia. That’s what Dr. Cooperman says I have. Acute retrograde amnesia—the loss of all memory prior to a certain event. In this case, me taking a swan dive off the roof of our house.

  “I know what amnesia is,” I tell him. “So how come I remember a random word like that, but I can’t remember my own name? Or my own family? Or why I was climbing on the roof?”

  “That I can answer,” supplies the younger guy, who turns out to be my older brother, Johnny, a college student home for the summer. “Your room has that dormer window. You just open it up and crawl out onto the eaves. You’ve been doing it as long 
as I can remember.”

  “And did anybody warn me I might break my neck?”

  “Only since you were six,” my mother puts in. “I figured if you survived this long it was time to stop worrying. You were such an athlete …” Her voice trails off.

  “Amnesia can be an unpredictable thing,” the doctor informs us. “Especially with a traumatic injury like this one. We’re just starting to understand which parts of the brain control which life functions, but for all we know, it has nothing to do with geography. Some patients lose long-term memory, some lose short-term memory. Others lose the ability to transfer from short- to long-term. In your case, the damage seems totally confined to your sense of who you are and what’s happened in 
your life up until this point.”

  “Lucky me,” I say bitterly.

  Cooperman raises an eyebrow. “Don’t knock it. You remember more than you realize. You can walk and
Loading...


  Amnesia. That’s what Dr. Cooperman says I have. Acute retrograde amnesia—the loss of all memory prior to a certain event. In this case, me taking a swan dive off the roof of our house.

  “I know what amnesia is,” I tell him. “So how come I remember a random word like that, but I can’t remember my own name? Or my own family? Or why I was climbing on the roof?”

  “That I can answer,” supplies the younger guy, who turns out to be my older brother, Johnny, a college student home for the summer. “Your room has that dormer window. You just open it up and crawl out onto the eaves. You’ve been doing it as long 
as I can remember.”

  “And did anybody warn me I might break my neck?”

  “Only since you were six,” my mother puts in. “I figured if you survived this long it was time to stop worrying. You were such an athlete …” Her voice trails off.

  “Amnesia can be an unpredictable thing,” the doctor informs us. “Especially with a traumatic injury like this one. We’re just starting to understand which parts of the brain control which life functions, but for all we know, it has nothing to do with geography. Some patients lose long-term memory, some lose short-term memory. Others lose the ability to transfer from short- to long-term. In your case, the damage seems totally confined to your sense of who you are and what’s happened in 
your life up until this point.”

  “Lucky me,” I say bitterly.

  Cooperman raises an eyebrow. “Don’t knock it. You remember more than you realize. You can walk and