He didnât know what to say. He was completely paralyzed and overwhelmed by his emotions. They were a whirlwind inside him. Joy, relief and ecstasy all at once. Tears, laughter, coughs and chokes. All at the same time. He couldnât breathe and he couldnât speak. He couldnât even move. For three seconds he was fixed to the spot, helpless and immobile, then she was on him.
She devoured him more than kissed him. At first he did not respond. This was happening to someone else. This was a dream. This wasnât real. But the passion of her kisses melted his disbelief. Her body was pressed against his and she was wrapping herself around him. He did the same. He felt her push him backwards with the force of her kisses. He didnât care. He was lost in the wild excitement of it all. Kissing, tasting, holding her tight. He only pulled back from her slightly when he needed to breathe. And that was when she laughed that unforgettable and so beautifully sweet, delicate sound that heâd missed so much.
âYouâre going to be alright,â Carol Anne said. âEverything is going to be just fine. I can see you. I can understand it. Iâm going to be here now, like this, and everything is going to be just fine.â
He knew that it wasnât her, possibly be her. She was something else, something alien or artificial or unexplainable. He didnât care. He launched himself at her.
âOh my God.â His voice was muffled by her long hair, âOh my God you smell the same. You the same. Youâre just like I remember you.â
âI can see you,â Carol Anne said cheerfully, âand I can understand that you cannot see me.â
He inhaled her scent. The familiar, delicious smell of strawberries and cream. He never knew what it was that made her smell that way. Heâs never asked and sheâd never told him. He breathed her in and sobbed into her neck as she squeezed his shoulders. She said more words, some did not make sense. He missed most of it, but heard when she spoke one last time.
âI missed you,â she said, âI really missed you.â
He held her tight. He couldnât speak now because all he could do was shudder and sob and crush her body to his. He knew he wasnât dreaming but there were flashes of anxiety when he wondered if, somehow, he was.
âThere, there,â Carol Anne soothed, âyouâll be fine now. I was waiting for you back at the flat. I knew youâd come home.â
He withdrew from her slightly. âYou were waiting? Is Jackie alive?â A lightning strike of memory exploded in his mind. âEilidh!â he shouted. âOh God, Eilidhâs on the bridge. I lost her there. Weâve got to go back and look.â
âWe should get you home,â Carol Anne said, âEilidhâs gone. Thereâs only you and I, the way itâs supposed to be.â
âItâs not far,â MacGregor said. âCome on. We need to go look for her He was dazed and confused. This wasnât Carol Anne, but it felt like her and smelled like her. He wanted to fold her into his arms again. But Hunter was still out there. Even if she that mashed up mess of flesh and bone, he had to know.
âWe can go back to the bridge,â Carol Anne said. âIf you really want to.â
She took his hand. He felt the warmth of her touch. It was so familiar and so wrong all at the same time. He kept telling himself that this was not Carol Anne. This could not be Carol Anne. But it felt like her, smelled like her.
âI have to go back.â
âCome on, then.â Her voice sounded reluctant. âWeâre not far away from the bridge. We can go back there and Iâll have a look for her.â
âThanks,â MacGregor said. âI canât believe itâs you! How is this possible? How can you be here?â
She pulled him along, gently insisting on his right hand.
âWeâll talk about that later,â she said. âNow please just be glad that weâre together. I know I am. I am.â
The words surprised him. There was something about the way she spoke. It was almost as though the words were a surprise to herself also. His mouth was open, but there were too many questions and the emotions were just too intense.
âOkay.â
She dragged him along. He let her pull him through the oblivion. A part of him felt reluctant to go. Heâd made it this far on his own. Was he giving up to turn back now or to allow Carol Anne to turn him around?
âCome on,â she said, âletâs go.â
He shook his head. His mind was foggy. Everything wasnât making much sense to him. Carol Anne being here was completely impossible in itself. He knew that he wasnât dreaming. But he also knew that this wasnât the real Carol Anne. It was a fantastic facsimile, but it couldnât be real.
He allowed Carol Anne to take him back the way he had come. She avoided the pavements and took him straight along the middle of the road. He wanted to protest, but the words wouldnât come. He was too busy trembling, too busy being disoriented and dumbstruck by it all.
It seemed like only a few minutes passed by. Carol Anne did not speak but she hummed quietly to herself as they moved together. He recognized the tune. An old Irish song he had heard her sing many times before. Her grandfather had taught her it, he remembered.
âBlack is the color,â MacGregor whispered. âYou remember it?â
âYou remember it, donât you?â
âYes.â
She stopped pulling him along. Her hand squeezed his lightly, playfully.
âWait here,â Carol Anne told him. âIâll go and see if sheâs there.â
Her fingers left his. âDo you know what she looks like?â he said.
âOf course I do,â she said. âWait and Iâll see what we can do.â
There were no sounds at all. She moved so lightly that she disappeared from his senses completely. He felt a sudden surge of panic. He was cold again, head to toe, shuddering with the thought that she might not return â that she might not have even been there to begin with.
âCarol Anne!â
âIâm right here. Thereâs no need to worry. Iâm looking for the woman you were with. I wonât leave you.â
He clenched his hands into fists. He was completely disoriented now. It seemed they could not be where they were supposed to be. It had taken him a long time to navigate to the old cinema and beyond. Carol Anne had only been holding his hand for such a short time.
âSheâs dead. The lady you were with. Hunter is dead. Iâm sorry to tell you.â
He didnât feel anything. Heâd already suspected as much. If Hunter had somehow survived sheâd have caught up with him long ago. He simply shook his head slowly. Carol Anneâs long fingers found his hand once more.
âIâm sorry it happened,â she said.
âI am too,â MacGregor replied. âCan we⦠bury her?â
âIn the ground?â Carol Anneâs tone was incredulous. âI donât think we could do that.â
âWe should try,â he argued, âWhatâs⦠what does it look like?â
âWell, itâs really, really nasty,â Carol Anne said. âLike a really nasty mess. I think that would be the most accurate way to describe what I was seeing there.â
She was pulling him away. He found himself resisting, subconsciously. He felt like the whole existence of Carol Anne represented a dream that he didnât want to wake from. Her insistence to leave the scene was wobbling the tentative illusion that he was trying so hard to dissolve himself into.
âAre you certain?â he said. âI need to know I didnât leave her behind. I canât justâ¦â
âYou arenât leaving her behind. Why donât you believe me?â
Both of her hands were on his face, touching him lightly. He remembered her touch, her smell. Her breath was close to his mouth, then she kissed him lightly.
Carol Anne withdrew from him. Her hands left his face and he felt the cold night air replace her delicious warmth. âThereâs nothing we can do. You have to believe me.â
She was taking him away from the bridge. She was stronger than he remembered. He found himself pulled along. He didnât resist too much.
âCome on now, Iâll take you home.â
âTo where? The flat?â
âOh course.â
âWhy?â
âIsnât that where you want to go?â she seemed confused. âIsnât this what you want?â
âBut Eilidhâ¦â
âEilidh, Eilidh, Eilidh,â Carol Anneâs tone was cold, âI wish you wouldnât say that name anymore. Sheâs behind you now. Iâm in front of you. Canât you see me?â
Her grip was tight, almost painfully so. Theyâd left the bridge again. She was pulling him back towards the Star Bar. Down Bridge Street towards Eglinton Street. She seemed almost desperate to leave the scene.
âWhy are we rushing?â
âI just want you to myself.â
Again, reality began to crack the fragile boundary of this fantasy. There was something about her tone that wasnât right. This wasnât the Carol Anne he remembered. But it was a good approximation.
âWeâve got all the time we want,â he said. âI⦠I know it canât be you. Look, I just want to tell you somethingâ¦â
âWeâll have all the time for talking later,â she protested.
âNo!â he dug his heels in and stopped her from taking him any further, âNo, I want you to listen to me.â
âThis isnât the way itâs supposed to be.â
âShh, just listen.â He squeezed her hand, âI it isnât you. I know it canât be. I know youâre from the SOD or whatever it was. The black ball north of here. The thing that started all of this. I know you⦠you belong to that thing.â
âYou shouldnâtâ¦â
âListen, Carol Anne. I just want to tell you that I donât care. I donât care anymore. Youâre⦠youâre enough for me. I donât care what you really are or what this is all about.â
âWell thatâs just fine,â she said lightly, âbecause I am Carol Anne.â
She kissed him on the lips. He smiled. Somewhere in the back of his mind, Hunter tried to float into his consciousness. He shoved her back. He held onto Carol Anneâs hand tightly and confidently as they walked together into the night, occasionally giving it a light squeeze.