They rested on one of the so-called dead-spots, close together, because the spot was so small, and as they basked in the light of their own glows, they allowed themselves the luxury of small talk. They discussed all those subjects that didn’t matter much in the larger scheme of things, like what music they liked, and who they thought won the World Series during their nine-month transition.
Their conversation took a sober turn, as late night conversations often do.
“When I get home,” Allie said, “I’m going to find a way to make them all see me.”
“But what if they never see you?” Nick said. “What if they just keep on living their lives like you’re not even there?”
“That’s not gonna happen.”
“Why not?” said Nick. “Because you say so? That’s not how the world works.”
“How do you know? You don’t know how this world works any more than I do.”
“Exactly. That’s why I say we learn more about it before we go home. We’ve got to find other ghosts with more experience.”
“Other Afterlights,” Allie corrected, still refusing to admit she was a ghost.
The thought made Nick look at his hands and arms, studying his own peculiar incandescence; his gentle Afterlight glow. The lines that ran across his palms were still there. He could see his fingerprints— but perhaps that was just because fingerprints are what he expected to see. He wondered if he would still look the same if he had made it all the way to the light at the end of the tunnel, or if the memory of flesh would completely dissolve into the glow once he reached his final destination—a destination where his family might already be.
“We have to accept that there may be nobody to go home to,” Nick reminded Allie.
Allie pursed her lips. “Maybe for you, but it was just my Dad and me in our car.
Mom stayed home because my sister was sick.”
“Doesn’t it even bother you that your Dad might not have made it?”
“He made it somewhere,” Allie said, “which is more than I can say for us. It’s like Lief said—everyone else in the accident either survived or they got where they were going—which means that either way they’re sort of okay.”
Allie did have a point; it was some comfort to know that there truly was some place they were all ultimately going—that the end wasn’t the end. Even so, the thought of his whole family making that mysterious journey all at the same terrible time…Then something occurred to Nick. “I didn’t see any dead-spots where the accident happened. We got thrown into the forest, but there were no dead-spots on the road!”
“We weren’t looking for dead-spots then,” Allie pointed out, but Nick chose to believe there were none. It was better than the alternative.
“Where were you going that day?” Nick asked.
Allie took her time before she answered him. “I can’t remember. Isn’t that funny?”
“I’m starting to forget things, too,” Nick admitted. “I don’t want to forget their faces.”
“You won’t,” she said—and although there was no evidence to back it up, Nick chose to believe that, too.
By the third day, they had passed out of the mountains, and the highway became wider and straighten They were still in Upstate New York, many miles away from their respective destinations. At this rate it would take weeks, maybe months to get there.
They passed town after town, and soon learned how to easily identify dead-spots.
They were different from the living places. First of all, there was a clarity to them—they were in sharper focus, and the colors were far more vibrant. Secondly, when you stood in one of those spots, there was a certain sense of well-being—a sense of belonging—as if the ghost places were the true living places, and not the other way around.
It was that fundamental grayness of the living world that struck more deeply than any chill. Although they wouldn’t speak it aloud, it made both Nick and Allie long for the lush and comforting beauty of Lief’s forest.
At dusk, on the fifth day, they found a nice patch of solid ground, beneath a big sign that said, WELCOME TO ROCKLAND COUNTY! Leaves poked through the pavement, lush and green to their eyes, eternally unaffected by the changing of seasons. The spot was large enough for both of them to stretch out and sleep.
“I’m tired of sleeping every night,” Nick said. “We don’t need it. We don’t get tired,” and then he said the real reason why he didn’t want to sleep. “I don’t like not dreaming.”
Allie felt the same way, but didn’t want to say anything about it. Once, many years ago, her appendix had burst, and she had gone under general anesthesia. It was a strange sensation. She started to breathe in the anesthetic, and boom, she was out. Then suddenly she was awake again, and it was all over. There was just a hiccup of time, some groggy confusion, and she was back, with an ache in her side and some stitches. It was like…not existing. Sleep here was the same way.
“We sleep because we can,” she told Nick. “Because it reminds us of what it’s like to be alive.”
“How can eight hours of death remind us of being alive?”