Part 6 (1/2)

Auracle. Gina Rosati 84130K 2022-07-22

”There you are,” he smiles at me as I hover around the swing chair.

I'm surprised he can see me. Usually, I have to summon up a considerable amount of energy if I want to be seen. Maybe I absorbed enough of Rei's energy tonight just by sitting with him that I materialized without meaning to.

”Are you sleeping?”

What does he mean by that? I must look confused because now he looks positively amused. ”I thought so. So you won't remember this conversation tomorrow.”

Oh, really! I try not to show the surprise on my face. How does he know this? Have I shown up in his room before and had conversations with Rei that I don't remember?

I shrug a little. Since I have no voice in this dimension, this conversation will be very one-sided. That's a small comfort.

”Is your mom home?” he asks as he resumes his spot on the bed and picks up his guitar.

I nod.

”Did she have a good time?” He strums a few random chords, then adjusts one of the pegs a tiny bit. I wait until he looks up to nod.

”Did you follow Seth and Taylor to the falls today?”

I pause, not exactly sure how to answer this. It's not like I can elaborate, so I nod. He just rolls his eyes.

”I thought so. I tried Seth earlier, but he's not answering his cell and I don't think they even have a house phone anymore. Did she give his cell back to him?”

Um, no. I shake my head, keeping my face as impa.s.sive as I possibly can.

”That figures. He must be livid.”

Why yes, he is. I nod.

Rei strums one particular string over and over, adjusting the corresponding peg until he gets the sound he wants, then he strums all the strings together. All the lights but his desk lamp are off, and his eyes are half hidden under shadows and dark hair. ”So I always wonder what you're dreaming about on the nights you show up here,” he muses as the sound of the music fades, ”but you can't tell me now and I know you won't remember the next day.”

He looks up and smiles that slow, wide smile. ”Or can you remember and you just don't want to tell me?”

I have never lied to Rei before tonight. I may not tell him certain truths that I know would lower his opinion of me, but unless the avoidance of a full disclosure is considered a lie, I haven't deliberately deceived him. Plus, he has been keeping certain truths from me, too. Like the fact that I am one of those people who slips out of their body during a dream and goes gallivanting off to la-la land. And this annoys me almost as much as the fact that I have no freakin' body!

”Want to hear your surprise song? You won't remember any of this, so it will still be a surprise when you hear it later.”

It seems there are lots of surprises today. I am starting to realize just how little I know about this dimension, even after a dozen years of wandering in and out of it. How did Taylor get into me? Why can't I get her out? How could Rei see me earlier and all those times he claims I've been here while I'm dreaming? Usually, I have to absorb a considerable amount of energy from around me in order to materialize in front of him. When he does see me, I know I appear solid to him, just as solid as when I'm in my body, but I can't ever remember anyone else seeing me when I'm out here.

When the song is finished, Rei looks up at me, and I smile and silently clap my hands. I love everything he plays on his acoustic guitar, and he knows this. He smiles a sleepy smile, so I know it's time to leave. I wave and point to the window.

”Okay, I'll see you in the morning,” he whispers as he parks his guitar on the stand beside his bed. ”Sweet dreams.”

For one crazy moment, I want to tell him what's happened, that Taylor's dead body is stuck on a branch downstream, that Seth will probably be blamed for her death, that I can't dream because I can't sleep because I'm locked out of my body because Taylor has stolen it. And then I imagine the look that will be on his face, because he'll think this is his fault, and if he had skipped his aikido cla.s.s, he could have prevented this entire fiasco. I have to get my body back before he finds out what's happened.

I spend the night hovering over my bed while Taylor snores, hoping she'll pop out of my body during a dream so I can get back in. Sometime around one o'clock and then again at four, my mom comes in and shakes Taylor's shoulder, just like the doctor told her to. Taylor wakes up enough to grouch at her, and then my mom leaves us both in the dark again.

I wonder if Rei considered the danger of someone taking possession of my body if I wasn't in it. I never really thought of it before, but it makes sense. If there's an empty sh.e.l.l left lying on the beach, won't a hermit crab move into it? I've encountered spirits in this dimension who are obviously dead and wandering, but I've always s.h.i.+ed away from talking to them. Maybe my subconscious was smart enough to realize if a dead soul had known I'd left a perfectly good living body lying around unguarded, it would just be an invitation for trouble.

Watching Taylor sleep is like waiting for a pot of water to boil. I need a better plan of action here, and since planning has never been my strength, I consider how Rei would deal with this.

One of Rei's favorite quotes is from Sun Tzu's The Art of War: ”Know your enemy and know yourself and you can fight a hundred battles without disaster.” It's a principle of aikido, too, to get inside your enemy's mind and find out what makes them tick.

In principle, that should work, but know myself? I can't even get into myself right now. But maybe I can learn a little more about Taylor. Really, all I know about her is from what I've seen at school. I've heard she lived in a big house on Main Street, which makes me wonder how she'll handle slumming in my c.r.a.ppy little house. What will she think when she wakes up in the morning and has to deal with my hungover father? I wait until first morning light to head over to Main Street and cruise up and down until I find a mailbox with block letters spelling Gleason stuck to it. I don't bother with such formalities as ringing the doorbell. I just slip right through the wall and find myself in a lavish master bathroom that's bigger than my bedroom.

The girl was loaded. I mean, you can't even compare apples to oranges; this is more like watermelons and raisins. I drift through a wall into an opulent master bedroom where the king-sized bed is still made, and then another bedroom that has the sterile feel of a guest room. One of the bedrooms is decorated in a sporty boy motif, with a tween-aged boy asleep in the bed. The last room looks like a picture out of a magazine, and the furniture in here easily costs more than all of the furniture in my house combined. Her computer is state-of-the-art, and she has a flat-screen television attached to one wall. On another wall, there's a floor-to-ceiling bulletin board hosting a rainbow of award ribbons and dozens of photographs. I take a minute to check out all the glamorous shots of Taylor. Nope, she is not going to like living in Anna Rogan's bony little body.

Three doors lead out of Taylor's room. It's pitch-black through one door, so it's probably a closet; one door leads to the hallway; and the last one leads into her own full bathroom. She has her own bathroom? She had her own bathroom ... with cushy two-ply toilet paper and everything. Again I wonder: what did a two-ply girl like Taylor see in a one-ply guy like Seth?

And how will this upper-cla.s.s girl deal with my lower-cla.s.s life? Maybe after she's had to clean my father's puke off the toilet seat a few times, she'll leave my body of her own free will.

Or maybe she'll find my life is better than no life at all.

The smell of coffee wafts up the stairs. I follow it downstairs to the kitchen where Taylor's parents pace around two silent cell phones which sit on a granite countertop. Their auras are a strange mix of anger, sorrow, and hope. If I could appear right here and tell them what's happened to their daughter, would I? Or would I let them hang on to that little thread of hope just a bit longer?

It's a ridiculous question because I can't let these people see me in my astral state, and Taylor is so obviously dead, but still ...

I would leave them with hope.

CHAPTER 10.

I leave the Gleasons to the misery that awaits them and return home through a gray gloom.

Today would have been a good day to stay in bed and listen to the heavy rain hammer at the roof. Through the bedroom wall, I hear my mother's alarm clock start to squawk. She will hit the snooze bar once, then she'll get up and usually she'll wake me as soon as she's showered. I can't imagine she'll make Taylor go to school after the night she's had. I move out to the living room for the sole reason that I'm sick of listening to Taylor snore. It's not much brighter out here, except for a small light on over the kitchen sink. The recliner is empty, but not inviting. There's a greasy indentation where my father's head usually rests, and an overall flakiness dusts the black vinyl. Last night's empty bottle and gla.s.s wait on the end table for my mom to pick them up, making way for today's bottle and gla.s.s.

It will be interesting to see Taylor's reaction when she meets my father. Best case scenario is she's completely disgusted and would rather be dead than to live with the guy. Worst case? She shows him att.i.tude and he shows her the back of his hand, promise or no promise.

My mom's alarm clock starts bleating again. She shuffles out in her bare feet, opens my bedroom door without knocking, and peeks at the lump on the bed. She sighs as she pulls the door closed behind her, then goes to the phone and calls school to tell them I won't be in. Next, she calls her office and tells them she'll be working from home today. Finally, she calls Rei's cell phone and leaves a message.

”Rei, honey, it's Lydie. Don't wait for Anna this morning. She's not feeling well, so I'm keeping her home. Stay dry.”

This is the same message she leaves him whenever I have serious cramps, and Rei broke the code on that a long time ago, so he shouldn't worry. Much. My mom goes to start coffee, so I head back into my bedroom. G.o.d! I sound like a chainsaw! I ram into Taylor, just in case anything's changed overnight. It hasn't. I bounce off and drift toward the wall. She opens one eye and snarls at me, then pulls the covers over her head.

Keeping my distance, I check on Rei. If he saw me, he'd probably think I'm still dreaming since I'm home sick, but still, I'd rather he didn't see me. I'm glad my mom didn't tell him I whacked my head, because he'll just blame my father. There's an overgrown blue spruce tree near his driveway which offers good camouflage should I erroneously appear again. After a while, he steps onto his front porch, looks toward my house, then turns his phone on and discovers the message that's waiting for him. No, he doesn't look too concerned. He snaps the phone shut and pulls up the hood of his sweats.h.i.+rt before he steps off the porch and into the downpour.

I wonder if Seth will be on the bus. He should still have plenty of gas in his car, but I feel this nasty medley of guilt, fear, and curiosity when I think of Seth. I was so freaked out to find Taylor in my body that I admit it: I forgot about Seth until just now. I wonder where he is.

I don't expect he'll be on the bus, but I check it anyway and find his usual seat empty. I check Seth's house, but he's not there either. I swoop over the school parking lot, but I don't see his car.

Taylor's parents must have talked to her friends by now, and at least one of them must have known about her plans to meet Seth at the falls. Seth knows the police will come looking for him. He might not be very academically inclined, but he's not stupid.

Once I've touched someone a few times, I can memorize the unique rhythm of their energy pattern. It's like hearing the drumbeat from a song, and wherever they go, they leave a slow fading echo. Even though Seth seemed chronically sweaty to me, we've high-fived a few times, and I arm wrestled him for three-quarters of a second once before he slammed my arm against the tabletop, much harder than necessary, and whooped like he had just scored the winning touchdown at the Super Bowl. That was enough touching for me, but I know his energy pattern well enough to find him.