Read Almost Alive (The Beautiful Dead Book 3) Online
Authors: Daryl Banner
When John returns, he adds the wood to the fire and it grows, glowing with a wonder that is both furious and beautiful. We cut a hole in the center of our enormous makeshift covering for the smoke to escape, and I watch as the billowing pillows of grey twist their way into the endless grey above.
“Will you tell us when it’s morning?” I ask John as he sits in the chair next to me. His hand finds mine and he doesn’t answer, leaning back in the chair and paying no mind to the world or the flames at our feet. “John?”
“I can’t,” he answers.
I sit up, confused. “What do you mean?” He doesn’t answer, staring glumly at the floating ceiling, which flaps lazily in the calm night breeze. “John?”
“I can’t.”
The words send a chill through my bones. For a while, I think he’s meaning it metaphorically. Then I think he’s meaning it literally because we’re underneath a massive covering, our view of the sky blocked except for the hole directly above the bonfire. The pain in his face seems to suggest something else entirely.
“You mean …” I don’t want to say it. I don’t want to say it and for him to make it true. “You mean … you can’t see the sun anymore? The sky? The … light?”
He turns his head, his ominous brown eyes resting on mine, and I know the answer already.
Then, he says, “It’s the stone.”
I frown. “What do you mean it’s the stone?”
“Ever since I’ve been near it, the sky’s changed. Greyer and greyer.” John kicks at the ground, sending a tuft of soil into the fire. No one seems to notice, the others so involved in their own chatter. John and I have this horrible exchange alone. “I didn’t think anything of it at first until I realized the sky had gone. Now it’s just …” He looks away, unable to finish.
“But … I thought the stone’s protecting us,” I say stupidly, staring at it across the circle. “I thought …”
“It is,” he says, still looking away. “Like another Mayor who’s scared of Living things. It’s protecting us from …” He shakes his head. “From what, I don’t know.”
From our own demise, I answer. From turning to dust. In its presence, we’re safe. With its existence, we will live as long as we please. Everything has a price, yes, but I guess some prices are just harder to pay than others.
For the rest of the evening, or what we perceive to be the rest of the evening, we spend our hours chatting with one another and leaning back in our chairs, enjoying the endlessness of the night, enjoying the eternity, enjoying the worry-free zone of absolute self-denial we’d built for ourselves.
This is what it means to be almost alive. This is what it means to be dead, and yet not dead. This is the end without an ending. This is a part of the circle and you don’t know where the circle starts and where it finishes.
When he returns, the chatter and the noise quiets to a pitch, deadly silence. Jimmy collapses on his knees by the fire, his face dried of all tears and reddened, mad. All that’s likely left in his tear ducts is salt, and the flames dance in his eyes as we wait for him to say something.
He says nothing. He doesn’t need to.
Jasmine fetches him something to eat, though he doesn’t ask for it. Wordless, he lies by the fire and shuts his eyes, embracing his pickaxe like a teddy bear. Every set of eyes seems to meet one another’s in the circle, and I know the look of guilt when I see it.
This is not the peace any of us wanted. Not when one of our friends is lost to the caverns forever and a Human is suffering and losing his sanity because of it.
It is Jimmy who indicates that morning has come. By now, the fire’s eaten away the wood and all that’s left are glowing embers and smoky skyward snakes. After Jimmy is fed, Jasmine turns to us, her eyes heavy and sad. “I will walk him back to the caves,” she tells us, “and we will search for her together.”
I watch Jasmine leave from the gate and observe the spread of dead or dying trees, all of them having coiled and turned black just from my passing through with that potent, sickly stone. I’ve burned a path of decay through the vivid green that once was here. No wonder the whole journey to Shee’s lair was through dead and deader terrain; she clawed a scar of doom from the Whispers to the woods to the underground with her treasure.
“You were out there for a whole year,” I tell my mom that night when we are seated at the table in my house. John listens from the stiff couch we acquired, his arms folded and his eyes dark. “Looking for Shee. What were you doing all that time?”
“Oh. I found her quite quickly,” my mom confesses, staring at the Anima Stone, which pulses greedily. “But once I’d found her, I became … curious. I studied her. I studied the spiders. I was fascinated, really, and I knew that if I didn’t wait until the right moment, I might be captured. So I stayed around … I watched.”
“But … a whole year?”
She winces, gives a little shrug. “I suppose I lost track of time.”
I think on that. “Somehow,
that
I can believe.”
“Oh, your ring,” she murmurs suddenly.
I’m playing with John’s ring on my finger. Then, realizing the irony, I say, “Yeah. Your favorite ring, huh?”
“That
hurt
,” she admits with half a laugh. “Steel is a horrible thing to a Deathless. Even though the years might have … taken away my vulnerability to it, I don’t trust touching such metals so easily.” She looks away. I do too, my gaze lingering on John at the couch. He’s looking at my hand now, studying the dull ring he once gave me long ago that saved me.
Turning back to my mother, I suddenly say, “I died too young.” Her eyes snap to mine, surprised. “I wish I could’ve … experienced the world and learned more. I wish I could’ve gone to college and had some annoying, horrible roommate. Maybe I’d take classes and excel in some of them and bomb in others. I could stand in front of a classroom and give a presentation on zombies.” I laugh, amusing myself. John on the couch, however, might still be trying to figure out what a word like “college” means.
My mother pushes a strand of my hair out of my eyes, draping it behind my ear. “Count yourself lucky, sweetie, for not having to witness the torment of your twenties, watching all your friends’ arrogance become their downfall.” She sighs, staring into her hands. “And then the tragedy of the thirties, all your friends losing their youth, hair receding, bellies pushing out. Then the forties cripple them into insecure material-grabbing monsters who feign maturity while … while grabbing at all signs of youth they can muster, before plunging mercilessly by time’s firm grip into their fifties, then their sixties, then their seventies … as their hair turns white as winter and falls out and their sanity slowly scatters like bugs … Oh, there is
nothing
less pretty than the passage of time, my dear, and you were spared every ugly hour of it.”
She closes her fingers, looks up at me with a lightness in her eyes. Then, almost casually, she scoots her chair over, putting it right by mine, and she pulls me in for another of her bone-crushing hugs. I figure, in these past few days, she must be making up for an undeniably large amount of lost time.
“I would give anything to have died at nineteen,” she murmurs into my ear. “Oh, Claire, my dear, dear, dear sweet Claire. Life was so stupid. All the tiny little things I worried about every day … broken nails, bad attitude from a friend, the look my
own
mother would give me when I said something cross, the opportunity to kiss that one boy that I missed, the stupid thing I said where I might have gained a friend for life but instead made an enemy … Oh, Claire, all these stupid, stupid,
stupid
things I chose to do and say and not say and worry about … instead of just being happy. All these stupid minutes I wasted crying and wanting and hating, instead of feeling the sunlight on my face—
ooh,
the
sunlight
—All the foul words I chose to utter instead of, say, telling you that you look so pretty in your prom dress.”
Her arms squeeze me horribly. My neck could break and I’d let it. I don’t hug back because she hugs enough for both of us. John still watches stonily from the couch.
“The Living are so, so, so stupid,” she says.
Claire had to die so that Winter could live. I wonder if death is just life in a different form. The Chief, is he still within the planet, searching, curious? Is Helena with me somehow, her energy settling in the wood of the chair I’m sitting in, in the wind that makes my hair dance, in the flames we all watched last night?
When my mother pulls away, I’m left to stare at the ugly yellow rock on the table again. It is a deeper color, a richer color, like honey … It is getting hungrier.
“We’re feeding it,” I suddenly realize.
My mother puts a hand on my shoulder. “What was that, dear?”
“The Anima Stone. Every plant that shrivels in its presence. Every Dead that turns to dust … Maybe even John’s ability to see the sky and the sun … This ugly thing has absorbed all of that Anima.” I’m not even sure I’m right, but I know hunger, and maybe some psychotic, lost-my-mind part of me can recognize it, even within this stupid, fell rock.
“It won’t quit,” my mom says, following my logic. “It will do more than just protect us.”
“It’s the key to an Undead revolution.” I laugh dryly, turning to my mom. “I think about the choices I made … What if I had chosen long ago to
join
you in that Black Tower, mom? What if I had decided to become Deathless with you and rule at your side?”
My mother considers it, her gaze turning darker as she studies the cloying golden pulse of the stone on the table. “We would’ve won,” she finally says. “The Undead would have taken the world. Humans would die off and join us, Risen in their Second Life to feed on the planet’s blood until there’s none left. We’d never know how a racing heart feels, ever again. We’d never know pain or tears or taste. No growing old. Trapped, ageless forever. The concept of time would be obsolete. We would be living in a world of the Numb … a world of ceaseless Whispers.”
“But I didn’t choose death. I defied you, I defeated you and I made the Living a home out of Trenton.” I peer over my shoulder, studying the brooding shape of my love as he sits darkly with arms folded. “I chose life.”
I rise abruptly from the chair, unable to sit suddenly. My mother watches as I fetch the sheathed sword off the floor and brandish the Judge’s blade. It sings from the scrape of metal, its song ringing through our tiny home.
“People will come for the stone,” warns my mother. “That stone ensures our survival.”
Staring bleakly at the floor, I say, “Then we’d better protect it so it is never, ever destroyed.”
“Yes,” agrees my mother. “We’d better.”
I take one long, unyielding look at John, my love, my everything. Then I swing the sword up high and strike it with all my might into the heart of the Anima Stone.
T H E F I N A L C H A P T E R
F O R E V E R T H E B E A U T I F U L D E A D
The booming crack of thunder that is the sound of a thousand tiny shards of Warlock eyes and undeathly wishes and stolen life shattering is so loud, it can rip the world asunder.
But it doesn’t.
After the deed is done, I find the Judge’s sword has broken into pieces along with the stone. Only the hilt remaining in my palm, I lay it gently on the table, then join John on the couch. We stare in silence at the remains of our salvation, now in pieces, like we all soon will be.
My mother nods. “That’s one way to do it.”
When the morning light finds us, imaginary or not, I think a new sort of peace finds us with it. It’s the peace of true freedom. The peace of the infinity that is to become of all of us Living and Dead. The peace of absolution.
Or whatever.
I’m with the girls on Jasmine’s porch, excluding Jasmine herself, of course, as she’s with Jimmy in the caves. We’re sharing stories when the unsettled dust down the road brings with it an unexpected visitor. I’m on my feet in an instant and rushing to the person whose armor can’t hide her. I hug her so hard, she grunts from the effort.
“You’re alive,” she remarks, her lips caught in my hair.
“Not exactly,” I joke back, overcome with emotion. “I don’t know why I thought I’d never see you again.”
We pull apart and I stare at the woman in front of me. It strikes me as so strange, considering she was once a child whose tears wetted my shirt when she clung to me.
“Jasmine caught me up,” says Megan, sounding rather matter-of-fact. “She and Jimmy made a stop by the city before … Well, she told me about Ann as well.” Megan tugs her gloves off, lays them over the porch railing. “Not a day’s passed that I haven’t worried on you and the others. I woke screaming in the night, picturing all of you turned to dust, and …” Her gaze detaches. “I don’t know what I’m doing anymore, Winter.”
“Well, you’re running this big ol’ city,” I say casually. “Y’know, giant scary thing full of metal buildings that we used to call the Necropolis. Not sure if you’re aware, but you’re its Mayor.”
Megan feigns surprise, the ten-year-old I know coming out in her eye—the Human one. “Is
that
what I’m doing?” Her laughing face finds Ash’s and Marigold’s. When her eye lands on my mother, her face changes. “J-Julianne.”