Authors: Jonathan Maberry
without the duels, balcony
confessions, kissing and sex.
Zero sex, although we did talk about it.
We talked about what we liked.
(I made everything up. All the sex
I've ever had was in my imagination.)
We teased each other with fictional
scenarios of what we'd do to each
other when we finally met.
On this side of death, anyway.
We Also Talked
Often late, often long, about
the other side of corporeal death.
I asked if he was certain about
an afterlife. He didn't hesitate.
How could you doubt it? The body
is a vessel, and inside it, the essence
of existence. Some call it the soul,
and it can't be extinguished.
I'd only recently considered it,
had no clear sense of a hereafter.
“But what comes next? Heaven?
Hell? Something else completely?”
He paused, and I could almost
hear him shrug.
We can't be
certain 'til it happens, and that's
half the fun of it, you know?
Uncertainty never sounds like fun
to me. I was more confused than
ever. I asked if he thought people
had sex after they died. He answered
with a question,
Why would
the spirit rely on the physical
for pleasure?
I figured it was
rhetorical. But then he continued,
Without the constraints of flesh,
energy is free to do what it will.
Imagine the rush when separate
energies collide. Totally orgasmic!
I Thought He Was Enlightened
So when we started talking
about being together forever,
sans flesh, I wasn't scared
at all. I was intrigued.
Anyway, what did I really
have to lose? Not like this life
was taking me anywhere special.
Not like this life had brought
me anything but massive clouds
of sorrow, from my father's death
when I was twelve to my best
friend's, not so long ago.
Cam took charge of planning how
we would do it. He wanted to go
out in styleâvia bullet or rope,
so people would remember.
I preferred something a little less
dramatic, not to mention painful.
Pills for me. There are plenty in
the medicine cabinetsâMom's,
and mine. The one thing Cam
was adamant about was going at
the same time, so the exact same
door in the continuum would open
for both of us simultaneously.
I believed him in a way. But,
personally, I was discussing
abstractions. Anyway, my M.O.
has always been more talk
than action. Did I swear I'd do
the deed at the precise moment
he did? Yes. When he asked,
Do you give me your solemn word?
I vowed that I would swallow
those pills right before he stepped
off the desk in his room, noose
around his neck jerking tight.
I swore I would, but when Cam
jumped feet first into the forever
night, I had only taken two
Valium with a tumbler of Wild
Turkey. I got buzzed. Cam died.
It Is Late Afternoon
By the time I get home, shadows
deepening toward evening. Silence
swallows the house, and I'm grateful
for my mother's usual Saturday
afternoon bowling. I go into
my room, drop the blinds, hang
a sign on the outside of my door:
Taking a nap. DND.
She knows the code: Do Not
Disturb. She's seen it hundreds
of times, and unless I'm already
waist-high in manure,
she respects my right to be weird
in private. In semi-darkness,
I flop down on my bed, close
my eyes, consciously relax
every muscle, begin to drift
toward a gentle rose-colored glow.
Closer. Closer. The light grows
brighter. Darker. Red. Blood
scarlet. I jump back into awareness.
I'm in my room, and it's black
in here, except for . . . a red light.
Flashing. Flashing. Flashing on
my computer screen. No, not just a light.
Words. Hard to read from here.
I get up, cross the floor. Five words.
Flashing, red:
What would you die for?
My Entire Body
Goes rigid, morgue cold.
“Turn it off!” screams my brain,
and I lean toward the computer,
but suddenly I don't want to
touch it. Mustn't touch.
Mustn't look. I turn away,
flip on the lamp. Soft copper
light scatters the darkness.
Chloe!
I jump at the sound,
but the voice that falls heavy
in the hallway belongs to
my mother.
Dinner's ready.
Dinner? Yeah, I'm starving.
But I answer, “Be right there.”
Some masochistic sliver
of my psyche makes me
turn back toward my desk.
The monitor no longer blinks.
A single word remains,
a steady crimson glow:
die.
Every Molecule
Of air is sucked
from the room. Run.
Run or follow through.
Follow through and die.
Run. Try. Can't. Stuck.
Rooted to the rug. Move!
I move. Stumble. Fight
to reach the door. Breathe.
Can't. No oxygen. Vacuum.
Door. Almost there. Reach.
Something. Pulling. Tugging
me backward. Scream! Can't.
No air. Need air. Hands. Clawing.
Hands? Can't be. There's no one here
but me. Knob. Reach. Turn the knob . . .
The Hands
Let go suddenly, and when the door
jerks open, I almost fall, face forward
against the far wall. “Goddamn it!”
A brew of emotions
simmers inside.
Fear.
Anger.
Curiosity.
Hands? (Claws.) No
way. My room is empty,
right? The words on my computer,
written by a dream. Right?
Spooked or not, I turn around,
suck in breath.
Two steps, I'm at my door.
I switch on the overhead
light. It floods
the room with stark
white and nothing
is amiss. No hands.
No red glow. No
words. Just a blank
black screen. I reach
for the power button, erupt
a cold sweat beneath the hair,
lifting on the back
of my neck.
The computer
is already off.
Mom Screams
From the kitchen,
Chloe! Damn it! Dinner!
“I'm coming!” I insist
loudly, but have to take
several deep breaths and
dig my fingers painfully
into the opposite biceps
so I can try to quit shaking.
Mom would want to know
what's wrong, and what could
I tell her? That my Mac seems
to have a mind of its own?
Okay, none of that crap
happened. It all rolled straight
out of my burial-fueled
nightmares. I stuff it inside,
go to share Mom's table
and make her happy,
though I'm not sure why.
She should feel as miserable
as I do. But no. She's humming.
Singing some old eighties
crap under her breath.
When she hears my footsteps
scratching the floor,
she turns, grinning
like some demonic clown.
Hope you're hungry.
I bought too much Chinese.
The sweet and sour is gag me
sweet, and the chow mein
noodles remind me of worms,
but I stuff them into my mouth,
try not to choke when they squiggle
down, and hope Mom's post
bowling, carb craving appetite
keeps her swallowing
instead of talking. Right.
Like that's going to happen.
Blah, blah, blah. Blah, blah,
blah. What did you do today?
I could give her my usual,
“Nothing much,” but then
she'd feel the need to pry
information from me. I
shove another forkful
into my mouth, chew slowly
while I consider a lie.
Screw that. Too much
work. I shrug. “Went to
a funeral. Burial, actually.”
She cocks her head, curious.
You don't say. Like, whose?
“Just this boy I knowâknew.
And to save you the trouble
of asking, he committed
suicide. Hung himself
until dead.” Shock value.
All she says is,
Oh.
Then, after
some thought,
Are you okay?
My shoulders jerk up and down
again. “Sure. I didn't know him
all that well. Just weird. One
second he's here. The next,
poof
. Wonder where he went.”
If he took his own life, he went
to Hell. You should know that.
I'm sure that's what her pastor
would say, but Cam pretty much
convinced me there's no such
place as Hell, or Heaven, either.
“You really believe that, huh?”
Well, of course. Don't you?
She stares like I'm a stranger.
“I don't know. I just wish
I could be sure that there really
is something more.” I think
for a minute. “Hey, if I died,
where do you think I'd go?”
Zero hesitation.
You're a good
girl. Good girls go to Heaven.
Am I good? I suppose for
the most part I am. I don't
cause a whole lot of trouble.
Treat my mom okay, go to
church with her on Sunday.
But sometimes I think dark
thoughts, and that was especially
true when I connected with Cam.
Does simply discussing suicide
lock you out of the Pearly Gates?
I wish the definitive afterworld
manual wasn't written thousands
of years ago. Surely the rules
have changed by now. Or maybe,
like Cam said, all that garbage
was made up by men thirsty
for power. Mom offers two
fortune cookies, allows me to
choose first. As I unwrap mine,
she opens hers and reads,
You will receive good news
from a long distance.
“Hope it's money,” I joke,
then immediately turn serious
when I crack open my cookie.
A broken promise leads
to an unexpected encounter.
Goose Bumps Erupt
“I've got a headache,”
I claim, and it's the truth.
“I'd better go lie down.”
Take an ibuprofen right away.
You don't want that to turn
into one of your nasty migraines.
I get them sometimes, usually
induced by stress. “Will do.”
But there's something better
than ibuprofen stashed
in my underwear drawer.
I return to my room, where
Valium, Percocet, and Wild
Turkey lay in wait. I saved
them up for over a month,
sneaking Mom's painkillers
here and there to augment
my personal collectionâ
some bought at school, some
traded for, some prescribed
by my personal therapist, Paula.
Okay, I have a few issues,
including anxiety and panic
attacks, as well as intermittent
insomnia. I do want to sleep
tonight, so I pop a single Valium,
plus a Percocet, wash them down
with a small glass of whiskey.
I don't want to get sick, just
messed up enough to tumble
straight down into a darkness
dreams dare not invade.
It doesn't take long. I'm sinking . . .
I Hear
The door knob turn, lift my eyelids
as far as they'll go, try to discern
who has crossed the threshold and
owns the footsteps creaking the floor.
I see nothing. I try to sit up, but have sunk
so low into my bed that it holds me
in place. “Who's there?” It's a lame
attempt to exhale words. They lodge
in my throat, a huge wad of fear-flavored
gum. Closer. Whoever it is has almost
reached my side. Still, I can't see him.
I've no clue how I know the intruder
is male, but I sense he has something
unsavory in mind as he moves into place,
and now the mattress depresses beside
me. He wants me. Wants to touch
my nakedness, sleep-warm beneath
the covers. “N-n-no.” It's a soundless
stutter, and the invisible he is weighting
me, pushing down on my body. I know
what he wants and try to scream, “Help,”
but all that escapes is a breathy hiss.
He buzzes in my ear,
Don't fight.
It won't hurt. Imagine the rush
when our energies collide. You broke
your promise, but I'm patient, and
since you wouldn't come with me,
I decided to visit you. Just relax.