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The Girl in the Green Silk Gown by Seanan McGuire (8)

Chapter 8

Small Rooms Filled With Memories

IF LAURA’S CAR IS NEAT AND NEW AND PRACTICAL, her apartment is what happens when a used bookstore and a grandmother’s bedroom love each other very, very much. If a space can be repurposed for book storage, it has been; there are even bookshelves in the bathroom, which I have to visit again, to my immense displeasure. At least she puts her money into decent toilet paper, and I don’t come away feeling like I’ve just sandpapered my vulva.

I do come away wondering why anyone would think their demonology collection belongs above the toilet, a question that only lasts until I track the sound of Laura’s voice to her bedroom, where an entire wall is given over to demonology texts. The bathroom is the overflow. The terrifying, unwelcome, likely-to-summon-something overflow.

Laura is sitting on the edge of her bed, a laptop on a TV tray in front of her, typing with one hand while the other holds her phone. I stop in the doorway and gape.

There is a bed, yes: Laura is still mortal, she needs to sleep. It’s even a big bed, although its size is somewhat lessened by the piles of books heaped around the edge, transforming it from a spacious place to dream away the hours to a claustrophobic slice of library shelf. The walls are lined entirely in bookcases, volumes stacked double and even triple deep, and that isn’t enough to contain the books. They dominate the floor in unsteady piles, with only the narrowest of paths through. I’m not staying where I am out of respect for her privacy. I’m doing it because if I take one step into that room, I’m going to knock everything over, and she’s going to kill me.

There’s probably a kind of ghost that only arises when someone gets murdered by an outraged bibliophile, and I have no desire to experience that kind of afterlife firsthand.

“I don’t need a full-sized pizza, I just need a personal pie that can be eaten while I’m on the road,” says Laura, sounding annoyed. “Yes, by tomorrow. No, I don’t see why it being a rush job means you should charge me for things I’m not going to use.”

She spots me in the doorway, and waves me in. I shake my head, pointing to the stacks of books on the floor. She blinks, first at me, and then at them. It’s like she didn’t even realize they were there.

Grief is a monster. Laura got so wrapped up in grieving for Tommy, grieving for the idea of Tommy, and needing to avenge what she perceived as his murder, that she fed her whole life into grief’s maw. Whoever she would have been, whatever she might have done with that brilliant and flexible mind of hers, grief swallowed it all whole and left her with this. There’s nothing wrong with research. Books and cleverness can move the world in the right hands, and I’ve seen it happen enough times to respect it. But there should be balance. There should always be balance. Laura lost her balance a long time ago, and she’s been falling ever since, tumbling head over heels down a rabbit hole of research that won’t ever let her go.

She lets out a loud, put-upon sigh. “Yes,” she says. “Yes, I will pay. Yes, I will send a suitable picture, so you know who to deliver the pizza to.” She drops her phone next to the laptop, typing a few aggravated lines before she pushes the tray away—narrowly missing several stacks of books in the process, which is probably more unnerving for me than it is for her—and grabs the phone again, standing.

“Come on,” she says. “There’s a clean white wall in the hallway. I need a picture.”

“Of the wall?” I ask blankly.

“Of you,” she replies.

Automatically, I touch my hair. It’s too long for my tastes, the length it was on that long-ago prom night, streaked with lemon juice highlights and snarled around bits of hay. Laura snorts, clearly seeing the vanity and confusion in my face.

“I’ll loan you a hairbrush,” she says. “And maybe a T-shirt. It’ll be a little more believable if you’re wearing something with the University logo on it. We have similar coloring. Put you in the same brands and nobody will question whether you’re really my niece.”

“Uh,” I say. “Why are we doing this? Not that I’d object to a hairbrush.” I remember brushing my hair. I remember it being soothing and even pleasant, which puts it well ahead of most of the other things I remember about having a physical body.

Laura looks down the length of her nose at me and says, very patiently, “We are in Colorado. Do you know how far it is from Colorado to Maine?”

“Uh.” I’ve been all over North America. I’ve visited every American state except for Hawaii, every Canadian province, every Mexican state. I’ve been on car trips that lasted for hours, until the sunrise forced me to abandon my borrowed coats and unwitting drivers. There’s nothing about this continent that I haven’t seen, haven’t known, haven’t gloried in.

But I’ve done it all while dead, and I realize I have absolutely no sense of how big it really is. Enormous, yeah, I got that part; too much for anyone to see in a lifetime, which is why I’m glad not to be bound that way. But mileage? That’s always been somebody else’s problem.

“It’s about twenty-three hundred miles, or about five, maybe six days on the road,” says Laura. “Even if I wanted to make that kind of drive, which I don’t, and even if I believed Bobby Cross wasn’t going to find us on some backroad somewhere and kill us both, which again, I don’t, I don’t have that much time off coming, and I don’t think you want to spend that much time incarnate.”

“I really, really don’t,” I say earnestly. The sweat from my earlier panic attack has dried on my skin in a sticky shell that feels like it cracks every time I move, yet never falls away. I’m disgusting. Thinking too hard about the body I occupy makes me want to scream.

“That means we’re flying, and flying means getting you a legal ID.” Laura starts for the door, clearly expecting me to get out of the way. “Nothing fancy. Just enough to get you on the plane.”

“What does that have to do with pizza?”

“Maybe it’s paranoid to assume the government would care about little old me, but I’ve always preferred safety to sorrow,” says Laura. I step aside and she walks past me, heading for the bathroom while I trail along behind. “Saying ‘I need a false ID’ is a great way to find out whether my phone is tapped. That doesn’t even start to go into what would happen if the NSA showed up here and found me hanging out with a woman who died sixty years ago.” She paused. “Girl. A teenage girl. They’d probably assume I bought you from an underage sex slavery ring, and that is the kind of knock my professional reputation simply can’t survive.”

“The NSA knows about ghosts,” I assure her. “Some of their recording equipment is sensitive enough to pick us up. They just ignore us and hope we’ll go away.”

Laura stops for a moment. “That . . . doesn’t help,” she finally says, and ducks into the bathroom, emerging with a hairbrush in her hand. She lobs it gently to me. “Here. Make yourself presentable while I find you a shirt.” She vanishes again, back into her bedroom.

I drift to the living room, with its book-lined walls and dusty floor, and perch on the edge of the couch, trying to work the knots out of my hair. This isn’t the pleasant process of my memories. This is torture. My hair still remembers the indignity of lemon treatments performed the night before I died, leaving it brittle and inclined to snarling. What’s more, it’s filled with what seems like half the Barrowman farm. Hay and corn husks and bits of apple branch catch and snarl as I tug them free, and by the time I’m done, I’m tempted to grab the nearest pair of scissors and start hacking. Only the fact that I don’t know what that would do to my second death is enough to stop me.

“Here.” Laura returns with a gray shirt clutched in one hand, and pauses to assess my hair before she tosses it to me. “Take off that dreadful jacket and change your shirt. I’m going to take your picture in the hall and send it to my contact.”

“So he knows I’m the one picking up the pizza.”

“Exactly,” Laura agrees.

“This is all complicated. Dead was easier.” I tug off the filthy shirt I got from the youngest Barrowman daughter and pull the shirt Laura gave me on in its place. When I look up again, she has her eyes turned toward the ceiling.

“We need to get you a bra,” she says. “Do not take your shirt off in front of people without one.”

“Sorry,” I say. It’s not that the dead don’t do modesty. The dead are not a monolithic entity, and when you have a community made up of people who remember what it is to be warm alongside people who died before the founding of any country still extant in the living world, you’ll naturally have a lot of opinions about a lot of things. But my personal sense of modesty got burned out of me a long time ago, and I hadn’t even considered that Laura might be unhappy about seeing my breasts.

“I’m serious, Rose. You need to avoid drawing attention to yourself. That sort of thing draws attention.”

“There’s no one here but us, and you told me to change my shirt,” I protest.

“Well, if I say something like that in public and you think it might lead to nudity, refuse.” Laura walks to the apartment door and looks back at me, brows raised. “Well?”

I roll my eyes and follow her.

All of this is unreasonable. All of this is stupid. It’s like Laura has decided to test my claims of being stuck this way by being as fiddly and precise as possible, in the hopes that I’ll get bored and disappear. I wish I could. Only “bored to death” is probably another thing that creates some sort of ghost I’ve never encountered before, and I don’t want to get trapped haunting this apartment building for the rest of eternity. I have shit to do.

She makes me stand against the hallway wall with a blank expression on my face while she snaps half a dozen photographs and sends them to her contact. Then she ushers me back inside and boils a box of macaroni on the stove, mixing it with cheese powder, milk, and margarine until she has something she says is Kraft dinner. Nothing about it tastes like the Kraft dinner I remember. The cheese is too sweet and the macaroni is too starchy. But it’s food, and it fills my stomach, and by the time we finish, she has a note from the “pizza delivery service,” telling her she can pick up my new ID in front of the library tomorrow morning at eight.

“I’ll book us flights to Portland before bed, while you shower,” she says. “From there, I can rent a car and we can drive to Calais. You’re my niece from now until we get where we’re going. Got it?”

“Got it,” I say, and tug on the bottom of my borrowed shirt. “Can I keep this for now? The other one is sort of gross.”

She makes a face that isn’t quite a scowl, but is more like an effort to stop herself from speaking. Then, in a clipped voice, she says, “We’ll go to Target tomorrow after we pick up your ID, and get you a few changes of clothing. Nothing fancy, but it’s best to avoid attracting attention, and you smelling like I never allow you to bathe is going to attract attention.”

“I’m sorry,” I say. “I don’t know how I’m going to pay you back for all this.” I don’t know how much things cost, but I know plane tickets and new clothes aren’t the cheapest things in the world.

“Don’t worry about it.” Laura dismisses my concerns with a wave of her hand. “I work hard and I don’t have much to spend money on. The kind of books I collect are expensive, but they don’t come around every day, and I don’t have any other big extravagances. I can afford this. Let me afford this.”

“But why?”

“Because I’m going to hold you to your word,” she says simply. “When my time comes, you’re going to take me to Tommy. That means I need to put you back where you belong. Don’t mistake this for me liking you: I don’t. I doubt I ever will. But a smart woman takes care of her tools, and as of now, you’re one of mine.”

There’s something chillingly possessive in the way she says that. It makes me want to get the trucker’s coat from the couch where I left it, to wrap myself in the memory of the warmth it held when he handed it to me. I don’t even know the man’s name, but I have his jacket, and that means I’m still a hitcher. I’m still Rose Marshall.

I am.

While I’m in the shower Laura makes a bed for me on the couch, clean sheets stretched over hard cushions, a pillow from the linen closet that smells of stale detergent and dust. It’s nicer than the bed I had when I was a child. Settling into it is no problem at all. I lie there with my eyes closed, listening as she brushes her teeth and showers, and I’m asleep by the time she walks past me to her bedroom.

When I open my eyes, the door to her room is closed, and there’s a pain in my abdomen that makes me sure—absolutely certain—that I’m about to die. I stagger to my feet, shoving Laura’s afghan aside, and feel the pain shift downward, from my lower back into my—

Oh, no.

The less said about what happens next, the better. Urination is not the worst thing the human body is capable of. This is disgusting. Everything about life is disgusting. The good parts—the cheeseburgers, the milkshakes, the laughter, the sunlight—just lead to more of the bad parts. Cause and effect and why are humans afraid of going to hell? They already live there. They already rot there.

I scrub my hands five times. When that doesn’t seem like enough, I get in the shower, spin the dials until I find a temperature that neither scalds nor freezes, and scrub everything else. I wash until it feels like my skin is swirling down the drain with the suds and the shampoo, and then I huddle in the corner of the tub, letting the water beat down on me, sobbing and shivering.

Every time I think the enormity of my predicament has finished hitting me, there’s something else, something like this, something I did every day without thinking about it the first time I was alive, something I would have waved off as ordinary and irrelevant immediately after I died. “If you go back to Earth, you’ll have to deal with all the disgusting things that come out of your body, with snot and shit and piss and bile. If you go back to Earth, you’ll have to deal with the worst parts of living, not just the best.”

It would have seemed like a perfectly reasonable bargain, once upon a time. But that was a lot of rides and a lot of roads ago, and now, nothing about this is anything other than terrible. Nothing about this is right, or fair, or endurable.

I shiver and sob until the hot water runs out and I’m stuck under the sleeting spray, chilling my skin, freezing me to the bone. That’s almost soothing. I’m so accustomed to being cold that being warm is almost unbearable. But living people get sick when they get too cold, and the thought of being sick—my head filled with snot, my lungs filled with cotton, throwing up every time I try to move—is enough to make me sit up and turn the water off.

The apartment is suddenly very quiet. Laura has managed to sleep through the whole thing. I struggle to my feet, slipping on the wet porcelain, all too aware of how easy it would be to slip and break my neck. How do people live knowing how easy it would be for them to die at any moment? How do they not just sit frozen by fear, letting their lives slip away one safe, swaddled second at a time?

There are towels on a rack next to the sink. I find one that isn’t already wet and wipe myself down, dead skin coming off with the water. I have never been this old. I don’t think I have ever been this scared. I am more afraid of living than I am of Bobby Cross. By the time I’m dry enough to pull my borrowed clothes back on I’m crying again, and I keep crying as I return to the couch, wrap myself in the afghan, and try to go to sleep.

Ways not to go to sleep quickly or easily: try to force it. Eventually, I succeed, and drop into a swirling hellscape of half-formed dream imagery, way too much of which centers on the bathroom experiences I’ve had since waking up in this unwanted body. The dead don’t dream. We don’t need to. The chemicals the human mind produces and occasionally needs to purge don’t occur in us, and so we’re able to keep going forever without so much as a nap. Sometimes we lose time because we get bored and let it go without reaching out for it, but that’s not the same thing.

I wake from a dream of Bobby Cross chasing me through an endless maze of broken doors and cracked concrete, sitting up with a gasp and opening my eyes on the bright light that streams in through the apartment windows. It makes me squint and shy away, raising a hand to block it out.

“Good,” says Laura. “You’re up. What the hell were you doing in the bathroom last night? You got water everywhere.”

“What?” I turn, still squinting. It’s so bright in here. Does Colorado get more sun than anywhere else? Someone should tell California. “I . . . um. I’m sorry. I had to . . . I had to take another shower.”

That’s not all I have to do. The pressure in my bladder makes it clear that I have to go again. My face falls.

“I didn’t even drink anything,” I wail. I’m whining and I know it and I don’t care. This isn’t fair. I have to drink at least a little to stay alive—I remember that from my high school biology classes, even if I’ve forgotten virtually everything else—and I’m resigned to visiting the bathroom multiple times before I return to blissful intangibility, but I shouldn’t have to do it when I haven’t done anything to earn it.

“Biology sucks,” says Laura. “Talk to me again when you hit menopause.”

My horror must show in my face, because she starts laughing, and keeps laughing as I dart into the bathroom and slam the door behind me.

Peeing isn’t so bad. I get everything handled as gracefully as I can, and stare into my own eyes as I wash my hands. This is me. This, right here, is me, Rose Marshall, sweet sixteen and never getting older. This is the face I’ve been looking at for decades, while my contemporaries have aged and grown into the adults they were always meant to be.

But this won’t be me for much longer. Not if time and the world of the living has its way. The changes may be small and gradual. It doesn’t matter. Whatever they are, I’ll be stuck with them forever, and I don’t want them. I just want to be me. I just want things to go back to the way they were, the way that they’re supposed to be.

Please.

Laura has cleared the bedding off the couch and is shoving clothes into a backpack when I emerge. She looks up, nods, and grabs a granola bar out of her pile of things to pack, lobbing it to me. I catch it automatically.

“I know you don’t want to, but you need to eat,” she says. “The TSA won’t be thrilled if you pass out in front of them.”

“The who?” I ask blankly.

Laura’s eyes widen briefly before she laughs. “Oh, man, I didn’t even think about that. You’ve never been on a plane, have you?”

“Planes were for rich people when I was alive,” I say uncomfortably. “There was no way we could ever have afforded it.”

“Welcome to the age of Southwest and JetBlue,” says Laura. “The airports have their own special police, the TSA, and we need them not to look at us twice. That’s why we’re going to buy you better clothes, and it’s why you’re going to eat that granola bar. There will be no fainting and attracting bad attention today. Not on my watch.”

“Okay,” I say meekly, and unwrap a corner of the granola bar, taking a hesitant bite. It tastes like chocolate and peanut butter and little pops of what I think might be puffed rice, all mixed up with oats and honey. It’s nice. I don’t say so, but I keep eating, and Laura looks satisfied.

“We’re picking up your ID in half an hour, and the Target is right around the corner from the drop point. Then we come back here, shower, and catch a cab to the airport. Our flight leaves at eight. We’ll be in Maine by midnight.”

How fast the human world has become while I wasn’t looking. They’ve taken distance and boiled it down to minutes, stripping away the magic of the journey in favor of the destination. I can’t blame them—time is so precious here, and Maine by midnight sounds like an impossibility beyond all measure. I nod, still silent, and take another bite of granola bar.

“Get your shoes,” says Laura. “Let’s go.”


The kid who sells us my ID—and there I go again; this “kid” is in his early twenties, and looks at me like I’m a baby, jailbait at best and a nuisance at worst—wears a baseball cap tugged down over his eyes and has a grayish tint to his skin, like he’s been running through coal dust. I wonder whether Laura realizes her “pizza delivery service” isn’t wholly operated by humans. I don’t ask her. It’s not my place, and more, it would be dangerous. I can’t afford to have him grab my new ID and run, not with the security Laura’s described at the airports. I need to be real. I need to exist in this world.

The ID says my name is Rose Moorhead. The picture shows a tired, wary sixteen-year-old girl with tangled blonde hair and the eyes of a feral cat, skittish, ready to bolt. It’s a surprisingly good likeness.

I’m still thinking about it when Laura hauls me through the automatic doors of the Target into a cavern that smells of popcorn and cleaning fluid and too many people making too many purchases. I can’t handle it. This is all too much, too real, and way too far removed from my truck stop and diner reality. The world has been changing the whole time I’ve been dead. I knew that—by the standards of my own kind, I’m virtually a modernist, keeping up with the latest trends and lingo—but I’ve managed to avoid considering what that means right up until this moment.

“These look to be about your size,” says Laura, thrusting a pair of jeans at me. “I’m going to grab a bunch of bras from the lingerie aisle while you try those on. Find something that’s comfortable and won’t fall down.”

“I don’t—”

“Go,” she says, and pushes me toward an arch labeled FITTING ROOMS. I step through.

The woman inside the small aisle on the other side looks up from the pile of shirts she was folding and offers me a patient, practiced smile. “How can I help you?” she asks.

“I’m supposed to try these on.” I hold up the jeans like a password, a skeleton key cast in denim and a price tag that makes my heart stutter in my chest. Laura says this is a cheap place to buy clothing. I can’t imagine what the expensive places must look like.

“Let me get you a room.”

Laura’s eye for sizes is good: the jeans fit me substantially better than the ones I got from the Barrowmans, hugging my legs and buttoning snugly around my waist. No need to worry about chafing with these jeans, or about them sliding down my hips when I have to run.

“Rose?”

“In here,” I call.

“Did the jeans fit?”

“Yes.”

“Good.” Laura’s hand appears above the top of the door, holding an assortment of hangers, each with its own plain beige bra. “Try these on, figure out what size you need, and come out. Leave whatever you’re not going to take behind. You don’t need to try on the shirts, and the jeans will let us know what size underwear we need to buy for you.”

I’m not sure how the jeans are going to tell us anything, but I’m past arguing. I just want this to be over. “All right,” I say, and take the bras.

They’re softer than I remember bras being, and more restrictive at the same time, although that may just be an artifact of spending sixty years not worrying about gravity. The first two are way too small. The third is big enough for some really epic tissue paper action. The fourth fits, and I feel like I can breathe even with the straps tightened the way my mother always told me to. This is as good as it’s going to get.

Laura holds her hand out when I emerge from the stall, back in my borrowed clothes and clutching my selections to my chest. I hand them to her. She checks the tags and nods.

“Good,” she says. “Come on.”

When I was a kid, I had this doll. Not a Barbie—she’s after my time—but a rag doll sewn for me by some well-meaning lady at the church, who’d seen that my family didn’t have much money for things like toys. Mama made me a dozen dresses for that old doll, stitching them out of whatever odds and ends she had sitting around. I used to change my doll’s clothes three and four times a day, whenever I was feeling powerless, like I couldn’t control anything about the world around me. Shoot, maybe I couldn’t choose what I was going to eat or make the kids at school stop calling me names, but I could decide what my doll was going to look like. I could control her.

If I ever see my doll again—not likely, since I don’t think I loved her enough for her to leave a ghost, but who knows; maybe I wasn’t the last child to hold her hand, just the first and best forgotten—I’m going to get down on my knees and apologize. Laura drags me through the store like I’m her personal rag doll, and my only purpose here is to agree to the things she throws into the cart, or to let her measure them against me, holding them up to be sure that they’ll fit my current frame.

She buys me two bras, two pairs of jeans, a plastic package of underpants, a plastic package of socks, three T-shirts, and a hoodie. She buys me a toothbrush and toothpaste, a hairbrush, and a box of menstrual pads. I don’t want to think about those. I don’t want to think about any of this. Having more than one bra implies that I’ll be here long enough to need more than one. Having . . . those other things . . . implies that they’ll be necessary.

I would rather die than rediscover the wonders of my period. Literally.

I slouch behind Laura, broken-spirited and homesick for the twilight, as we go through the checkout lane. The clerk who rings up our purchases laughs, saying to Laura, “They sure know how to sulk at that age,” in a conspiratorial tone. Laura laughs back. I hunch my shoulders, wishing I could sink into the floor.

At least I know we’re not remarkable. At least I know they’re not going to remember us. Women with sulky teenage children are a dime a dozen in this world, and while we might appear to be a cliché, at least it’s a harmless one.

“I have a backpack you can use,” says Laura, as we drive back to her apartment. “Change into something clean, and pack the rest. We’ve got about an hour before the car gets here.”

“Why aren’t you driving to the airport?”

“I don’t want to pay for parking, and I don’t trust Bobby not to track my car.” Laura risks a sidelong look at me. “I know you can find a car no matter where it goes, once you’ve been in it once. There have been plenty of reports of you doing exactly that. If Bobby can do the same, I’d rather he find my apartment, with us long gone, than figure out that we took a plane.”

“I don’t find cars, I find drivers,” I say. “But you’re right about Bobby. He finds cars.” She’s wrong about the airport. I can fly right now: I’m a living girl, with everything that entails. Bobby . . . can’t. Bobby is bound to the road, tires on asphalt, and while his demon car can break a lot of rules, even he can’t cross the country as fast as she says the plane is going to. Even if he could, he’d have no way of knowing where we were going. Being tied to the roads doesn’t mean getting the flight plans of every plane in the country at your fingertips.

I don’t say those things. Laura is invested. She’s trying to protect me by protecting herself. As long as she thinks both of those are possible—as long as she thinks we can get through this in one piece—she’s going to keep doing her best, trying her hardest, and focusing on the problem, rather than focusing on the fact that all of this is my fault. I did this to her.

Call it payback for a little attempted exorcism and move on. I’m not guilty. I’m not.

I refuse to be.

She parks behind her apartment and waves for me to follow her as she takes our purchases and heads for the door. After a quick, paranoid glance around, I do. It’s not like I have any other choice.


The airport is bigger and busier than I could ever have imagined. It’s like someone has taken the entry plaza at Lowryland and crammed it inside a single building, separating it into a hundred different lines. There are lines to check bags, to pick up tickets, to buy coffee. Mostly, though, there are the security lines, snaking through the concourse in great curves, as every person who wants to fly today subjects themselves to government inspection.

“In another ten years, they’ll probably want retinal scans at the boarding gate,” says Laura, as we wait for our turn under the microscope. “Be glad we’re doing this now.”

I am not glad. I don’t want to be here. Give me the familiar danger of four wheels on a blacktop, the road pulling and the car following its commands. Give me gas stations and hitchhikers and the ground, not this terrifying new world of flying machines and private armies. The TSA is everywhere, wearing blue uniforms and sour expressions.

I wonder what the ghosts are like. I wonder what I would see right now, if I could see the twilight. I wonder if any of them recognize me, if they’re pointing and whispering about this girl who looks just like Rose Marshall walking through their halls, draped in flesh and bone she didn’t borrow from anyone. I wonder if I’m scaring them.

“Hey.” Laura elbows me lightly in the side. “We’re up.”

A TSA agent beckons her forward. She gives me an encouraging nod and then she’s gone, leaving me to wait for my own wave, my own invitation. This feels like the judgment people say waits beyond death, only I’ve never been this afraid of any reaper or gather-grim. This is awful.

The man at the desk waves for me to approach. My feet seem rooted to the floor. He waves again, more impatiently this time. I’m holding up the line. The line, which matters more than I ever will, because it contains a thousand souls, and I only have the one.

Laura is already past the TSA, waiting in line for the scanner. I have to do this on my own. Swallowing hard, I step forward, holding out my ticket and ID.

The man takes them with barely a glance at my face, running the ID card under some sort of light that has to show it as a fake, simply has to. “Where are you heading?” he asks.

“Portland,” I say. “Maine, not Oregon.”

“Uh-huh. You traveling by yourself?”

“No,” I manage. “With my Aunt Laura.” It’s a lie, it’s a lie so big the sky should crack open and rain down hellfire on us both.

He doesn’t hear it. He scribbles something on my ticket—on my boarding pass—before handing it and my ID back. “Have a nice flight,” he says, and just like that, I’m dismissed from his awareness as he waves the next passenger forward, slicing off another segment of the line. I am through. I am accepted.

Laura smiles as I walk over to her. It’s a kind of smile I’ve never seen on her face before, maternal and patient and chilling. “There, that wasn’t so bad, was it, sweetie?” she asks.

It takes a beat for me to remember that she’s my beloved aunt in this strange new reality we’re crafting for ourselves, one where her sister, my mother, would trust her to cart me off across the country. “Not so bad,” I say bravely, and she laughs, and people smile all around us, at least the ones who’ve noticed us at all. Most of them are sunk deep into their own adventures, shutting out everything around them that doesn’t apply.

Must be nice to be able to focus like that. I can’t seem to focus on anything. There’s too much, and it’s all unfamiliar, and I want nothing to do with any of it. Every sound could be the floor getting ready to collapse or the ceiling getting ready to cave in and it feels like my heart is going to burst from the strain of worrying about it all. How does anyone survive being alive?

The scanners beep and buzz and let us pass, detecting no weapons. The salt and paint are all in the checked luggage, concealed in a tea set Laura says has passed muster before. The brushes and candles look like the usual weird teenage affectations, nestled as they are amongst my brand-new underpants and a teddy bear snagged from Laura’s bed for verisimilitude. We are believable travelers. No one looks at us twice.

Laura leads me to our gate, looks at my face, and starts laughing.

“Yeah,” she says. “They’re pretty big up close.”

The plane dominates the window, so large and imposing that I can’t believe I’m supposed to climb into it, to nestle myself in its belly and let it carry me into the clouds. This is terrifying. This is inconceivable.

“I can’t do this,” I whisper.

“You will,” says Laura.

I do. Colorado drops away below us like a penny falling into a wishing well, and I’m grateful for my window seat, and I wish I didn’t have it, because everything is dwindling so fast, and the roads are barely charcoal sketches on a land so big it hurts, and we’re going, we’re going, we’re gone. We’re gone.