Authors: Katharine Kerr
"How long have we been here? How long has it been winter,
Chris?"
"And we don't have to leave, don't you see? The circle keeps
us together. You aren't dead, Justin."
"I'm not—alive." It was hard to talk. Justin was afraid. "I dug
up the circle, Chris. 1 saw my body."
She blanched. Shook her head, covering her mouth with both
her hands.
"This is a forest of dead things," he continued, "of dying
things. It's going to be winter forever. Nothing will grow, noth-
ing will change." He caught her hands; they were warm, where
his were not. "What happened to Bill—you were starting to date
again, remember?"
She shook her head. "It doesn't matter anymore." She turned
away from him, and stared blindly into the fire; the tears running
down her cheeks were orange.
"I—I took your plants, you know? I took them, even though
I knew I'd kill them. I had to try; they were like a little bit of
your life. But when they started to die—it was like I couldn't
even keep that part of you."
He walked over to her back, and put his arms around her, be-
ing as gentle as she would let him while still holding on.
"And then, your body." She began to cry harder. "I identified
it, sort of. It was—" She couldn't speak. Minutes passed as she
gulped air. "After a few months, I couldn't stand it. I disinterred
you, and had you brought here. I wanted you to be near me. I'm
sorry; it was selfish. I know you never loved the rowans, not like
I've always loved them.
276
Michelle Sahara
"They were the heart of the forest, and you—you were such
a big part of my heart. It—it made sense to bury you there." She
tried to pull away, and then changed her mind and bun-owed
back into his arms. "I prayed so hard. I'd've died for you, Justin.
I prayed there, in the circle."
"You always were a sentimentalist and a romantic," he said,
crying softly into her hair.
Her voice changed, softening, lightening. He heard the miracle
in her tone; she had always been too prosaic to deliver it with
words. "And then, I woke up the next morning. You were here.
It was winter. And I knew it was going to be winter forever. All
the animals left. All the birds. It was sudden. Like they couldn't
be where you were.
"And I didn't care. Winter—frozen—I didn't care. I don't
care, Justin." She put her hand over her mouth. "I don't want to
lose you, I don't want you to leave me."
He held her. He just held her.
After she had fallen asleep, exhausted, he cradled her in his
arms. He had choices to make, and he was afraid of all of them.
He loved Chris, he loved life—and he understood that he was
supposed to have neither.
Well, what of it? He could live as he chose; the rowans had
seen to that, for her sake.
For her sake ...
He gazed out of the window, at the brilliant, icy day. They
were waiting for him, with their hungry eyes, their angry eyes,
their painful eyes. They had no life, and they belonged to the
green.
And Chris—admit it, Justin—Chris had no life, either. Just a
shadow of it, a tiny, small slice of unending winter. Because of
him. Because he died, but she was better than most at holding
on.
Oh, Chris, he said, although it was silent. You're going to
break my heart.
It snowed that night, for the first time that Justin could re-
member. The window was shut, but not shuttered; he stared at it
as if it were a television. The flakes fell, fast and furious, as the
wind whipped mem around the barren landscape. The rowans
were seeing to his body.
For five days, he refused to think about it at all. Life in the
cabin was almost normal, if nighttime visitations by hissing
GHOSTWOOD 277
nightmares were discounted—and as long as he stayed indoors,
they gave him no trouble. But ...
The plants were the worst. He went to them daily, spoke to
them, watered them, moved them to where the light conditions
were right. But they didn't recover; they didn't grow.
At least, he reflected, they hadn't died. But they weren't alive
either. He wasn't sure what the difference was between life and
death anymore, but he knew there was one—knew there had to
be one.
"... and this is why it has to be repotted. The roots have got-
ten too large for the—Chris, you aren't listening." He caught her
hands as she stared at his face. "Look, if you can love a bunch
of smelly trees, you can leam to appreciate a beautiful jade plant,
okay?"
She said, "why are you teaching me this?"
"Because I want you to know it. You can't go around just kill-
ing every plant you're given."
She tried to laugh, but it was the ghost of a laugh that she of-
fered him. He hugged her. "Now comes the most important part
so far. It's about the water—"
The sixth day. The world in winter was bright and cold.
Breakfast was good—and he didn't even worry about choles-
terol. He had cream with his coffee, used liberal amounts of but-
ter, ate bacon by the half pound.
"Justin—the way you eat, it's not good for you."
He looked up from his plate and grinned. "I'm dead. Food is
going to hurt me?"
She couldn't laugh. Her silence, uncomfortable and tight,
stretched between them until Justin left his chair. "Where are
you going?"
"For a walk."
"Can I—can I come with you?"
"Chris—" He walked around the table and hugged her tightly,
thinking that he had never hugged her so much in his life. "Of
course. Come with me."
He let her fuss about his boots—too light, and too short—and
his snowshoes, and when that didn't satisfy her, he left his coal
unzippered. He also neglected to put on a hat, and her gentle ha-
ranguing took the edge off her tension and made her seem almost
normal.
278 Mickelle Sagara
It was cold out, of course, and Justin could feet it at the bone
level. I'm dead, he told himself sternly, but apparently it didn't
make a difference, and after about ten minutes, he put on his hat,
scarf, and mittens, even though it made Chris insufferable.
Behind me naked trees, they were watching him.
"We're being watched, Chris." he said, casually.
She whipped around, and he covered his face.
"You have no idea what the word subtle means, do you?"
But she was scanning the same trees that he saw; her brows
were furrowed, her face pale. "Watched by what?"
"Just checking."
The dead voices sounded like me rustle of dry leaves gone
mad. Justin listened to mem whisper and mutter, and it was al-
ways with a longing for spring, the turn of seasons. He looked at
Chris' face, seeing the winter written there.
"Do you like the snow?"
"I've always liked the snow." She looked over her shoulder
surreptitiously—or at least, she tried to.
"What about spring? Summer? Fall?"
She was quiet.
"There are no birds at the feeder this year, are there?" He slid
his arm around her shoulder and she pulled away.
"Justin, please—"
"Come on, Chris." He held out a mitten, and after an awkward
pause, she put her hand into it. She was shaking. "Don't do
that." he said gently. "Your eyes will freeze."
"Justin, I don't want to go there."
"But you love the rowans," he replied. "And you'll never see
them in spring again either."
She bit her lip and nodded. "I don't care."
"You don't have to right now. I do." He pulled her through the
snow, and because it was him, she came. She always had, really.
Behind her, they followed, shuffling awkwardly. He aimed
once to look over his shoulder, but he contented himself with a
nervous glimpse. He didn't want to meet their eyes; he knew
whose death he saw mere.
The rowans were cold and ice-coated, but they were still a cir-
cle. Within their confines, the snow was pristine and perfect. If
he had come with a shovel, had broken the crust of snow, ice,
and dirt, no trace remained of his labor. He was grateful for it.
"Come on, Chris."
"I can't."
GHOSTWOOD
279
"Why?"
She swallowed. "I just can't."
"It's the circle. That's all. And I'll be with you." He hated to
make her cry in this cold.
"You won't be with me," she said; it was an accusation.
"I'll be with you for as long as you want." He held out his
arms, and after a minute, hesitating on the boundary, she stepped
into them. The circle seemed to close; the trees almost huddled
over them, as if for warmth. "Come and sit down."
She looked a bit dubious, but as they were dressed for cold,
she bit her lip and settled down to me right of the circle's center.
She wouldn't sit over the center itself, but he didn't push it. He
didn't want to sit there either.
He sat in front of her, and she pulled him back into her arms,
the way she had often done when they were both much younger.
"What's the worst thing about me that you remember?"
She was quiet for a long time. "The worst thing? Mom."
"What about Mom?" The question was a bit sharp.
Chris laughed. "You asked. I don't have to answer—I mean,
it hasn't bothered me for years."
"No—I want to know."
"Mom was the worst thing. She wanted a boy, I don't know
why. She always loved you best." She caught his hands and
pulled them up. "But I guess I learned from her, too. I love you,
even if you did try to sell my diaries. Closest you ever came to
dying—" She stopped speaking, and he pulled her arms into a
closed circle around them both.
"What's the best thing?"
"Best? There isn't a single best thing. There are so many, I
could go on for days. I tried to remember everything I hated
about you. I even hated you a bit, for dying. You know, I'm
wrong. Mom isn't the worst thing.
"The worse thing about you is that you died."
"I'm not thrilled about it either."
"You don't even remember it."
'True. But I'm not thrilled about the idea." He swallowed.
"But if you want me to make sense of it, I can't."
"I don't want you to make anything of it. I want you to stay
here, as if it never happened,"
"And if I stay here, you'll stay here, as if the rest of your life
never happens."
"Maybe you should let me make that choice," she replied. Her
hands became tight, even through two layers of mittens.
280 Mickelle Sagara
He was quiet; her hands gripped his like anchors imbedded
into the skin. "You know," he said quietly, "When we were re-
ally young, you were like another mother, but closer. You went
to school with me. You protected me from Tony Fisker—
remember him?" He laughed. "You promised you'd protect me
from anything."
"I remember."
"I didn't realize just how serious you were." His voice was
light. "But I can't let you make that choice. And I think I under-
stand, now, why no one should have to make it." He pulled his
hands away from her, it was hard; her grip was fierce. "I'm your
past, Chris."
"And what's wrong with the past? All our lives are made up
of our pasts' Our futures come from it—how can you just say
you'll walk? Justin, you selfish—"
"I'm selfish?" He said, wheeling. "Me? You've killed an en-
tire forest because you can't face the death of one man, and I'm
selfish?"
The rowans creaked in the wind that rose suddenly, lifting a
veil of powder-fine snow. She looked up, her voice lost.
*They weren't meant to live in eternal winter," Justin said qui-
etly, as his sister turned, slowly, to look at the perimeter of her
living circle. "You always loved lire. You said nature was your
gardener."
She began to weep. "But th-they're o-only t-trees."
He put his arms around her awkwardly, and held her, because
he knew she was lying-
"The worst thing about you," he said softly, as if changing the
subject, "was that you were always so damned insecure as we
got older. You were afraid that I'd grown away from you, that I
didn't need you anymore.
'The best thing about you ..." He thought about it for a min-
ute. Laughed. "You're right. The best thing isn't easy to pin
down. I've got so many memories, Chris—it'd take days to sift
through them all."
She was tense.
"My death doesn't change those memories, or the truth of
them."
"I don't want Just memories."
Justin began to laugh. 'That's exactly what you want—can't
you see it? That's exactly what 1 am, now. Memory, Chris."
"No, you're—"
"How long have we been here?"
GHOSTWOOD 281
She didn't answer.
"Have I gotten older? Have I learned anything, made any new
mistakes, had my heart broken another dozen times? Have I
found a job I finally like, found a way to contribute to the causes
I believe in? Have I changed at all?"
"Justin, why are you doing this to me?" Her voice was so
small, he wanted to stop.