HIS EYES OPEN AT ONCE. Not the calm, fluttering awakening she expected, but one moment heâs blue and unconscious, the next heâs staring at her, gulping for air, his face burning red.
âLuce,â he gasps. He inhales roughly, as if heâs sucking oxygen through a straw.
She presses on his neck to feel his pulse.
âColin.â She has a million questions. Can you feel me? Do you remember? Do you hurt? Can you move?
âI think I know where you go,â he mumbles thickly into her neck. His entire body has begun to shiver violently, and it takes him a moment to get the words out. âI think you live in the lake.â
Her veins run cold at the thought that her home is in that deep, isolated world. That she is the one haunting this school. But something about it rings true; sheâs more peaceful at the lake than she is anywhere else on campus. And there are no waters entering or leaving it; itâs as landlocked as she is.
Sunlight steals the darkness from Colinâs bedroom inch by inch and finally shines a spotlight on his warm, breathing body. For the hundredth time she memorizes his face, his neck, the way his hair curls and falls over his forehead.
âWake up. Talk to me,â she says. Itâs been one of the longest nights sheâs spent with him, waiting for him to come to and show that heâs not hurt. Or sick. Or brain damaged.
He makes some groggy waking-up noises, turning to face her. âYour skin feels so different lately.â He pauses, and Lucy hopes heâs realizing that this conversation seems familiar. âDo you think it has to do with me?â he says instead.
She pulls back to look at him. Really look at him, as in try to see if his pupils are reacting to light and his skin has taken on his normal color. Does he not remember that theyâve had this conversation before, twice now? âMaybe.â
âDo you think me being close to you, or even like you in the lake somehow makes you more . . . ?â He shakes his head, rubbing his face. âLike, more real?â
She smiles, trying to shake off the strange tickle in her spine she feels looking at his innocently wide-eyed expression. âI want to be a real girl, Geppetto.â
âIâm serious.â
âMe too.â
âMaybe we can shift into some dimension that shows us how to make you human again,â he says. âWith more practice.â
She gives him her best what-on-earth-are-you-talking-about look. âI donât think weâll be doing any more interdimensional Colin travel. I worry youâve used up your last ticket.â
He shakes his head, immediately riled up, and although her mind worries, her heart feels a silent, electric thrill. Something inside her begins beating. And itâs this that worries her: If sheâs his Guardian, why does it feel so good that heâs falling apart?
Lucyâs never seen Jay rattled before. At least, thatâs what she assumes is going on outside at lunch when heâs silent and fidgety. His usually piercing eyes are focused on his shoes, where he doodles with a black marker over older doodles. The fresh black ink stands out against the faded now-gray.
Over âgrenouilleâ he writes âeau.â Over âpapillonâ he writes âfroid.â Almost as an afterthought he adds CHAUD, in capital letters above it all.
Frog and butterfly become cold water, then hot.
She digs in her thoughts for more words in French but is greeted by only a vast expanse of gray. She canât puzzle out her memories, how they seem to be vaulted inside until they get the smallest nudge and then spill forward. She wonders what other things will tumble out when prodded. Maybe something to explain where she goes when sheâs gone and what kind of Guardian lets her Protected dive into a frozen lake over and over just so she can touch him.
âI didnât know you took French,â she says. Beside her, Colin is buried in a book about the acute effects of hypothermia.
âI donât,â Jay says defensively, as if heâs been caught somehow. As if heâs the one who should be explaining himself.
Theyâre an awkward threesome, with a secret the size of the Pacific Ocean between them, carrying on with their normal lives in the strange world of private school. Sneakers squeak on the asphalt of the basketball court in the distance. A short, chubby kid makes three baskets in a row from the three-point line. Lucy wants to ask Jay how he knows the French word for frog if he doesnât take French, but it also seems like the most inconsequential question she could ask after everything that happened this last weekend. âAre you okay, Jay?â
âMy mom is French,â he says instead of answering.
âSo that explains grenouille,â she says, and he grins, correcting her pronunciation under his breath. âBut it doesnât explain why youâre nonverbal today. Are you freaked out?â
His shrug is loose and slow. Jay is jerky and twitchy; the shrug is a decidedly non-Jay gesture. âJust thinking.â He reaches for a magazine inside his bag. The front is creased and covered in scribbled notes, drawings, and watermarks. The pages are dog-eared and torn on the edges, DIRT RAG emblazoned across the top in jagged green lettering.
âJay,â Lucy begins, unsure of his mood and how to best phrase her thoughts. She looks over at Colin, satisfied that heâs sufficiently distracted. âDonât either of you have that voice in your head saying that what youâre doing is crazy?â
âI do,â he says, then nods toward Colin. âHe never has.â
Of course Colin picks that exact moment to look up from his book. âI never have what?â
âThe self-preservation instinct. You never turn back from a hill or a jump. Iâve never seen you look at something and say, âI shouldnât try that.â It doesnât mean you always land it, but you always try. You have no good angel on your shoulder.â Bending to his magazine, Jay adds quietly, âOnly the devil.â
Colin laughs, and it feels like a fist squeezes Lucyâs heart.
Jay continues. âI canât believe it went like it did at the lake.â
âHow so?â Colin asks carefully.
Lucy starts to compile an apology to Jay, shifting words in her head to make the best, simplest statement, so he understands that she appreciates what he did more than he knows. She considers adding they would never ask it of him again, but the words feel slippery in her thoughts.
But instead of explaining his concern, Jay gives Colin a slow-growing smile. âIt worked. I mean, look at you. Youâre fine. Itâs crazy that we can actually do this, and Iâm over here just tripping out about it. I donât know why more people donât try. Makes me want to try.â
Already nodding, Colin sweeps into the conversation, and the two of them are off a mile a minute, and although Lucy knows she should be worried, everything inside her surges with relief. Apparently, jumping into a frozen lake is like any other extreme sport. You think youâre going to die, but what you get is the adrenaline rush of your life.
She hates her reaction, hates her calm. She hates how much she wants Colin in the lake. She hates not understanding.
So Lucy canât listen to their fascinated planning; it feels too much like condoning their insanity. Instead, she pats Colinâs leg as she stands, telling him sheâs going for a walk. Despite her internal struggle, she feels strength wrapping solidly around her bones; her muscles zip with vitality at the simple thought of seeing Colin go underwater, of meeting him on their trail. She wants to hide this strange, bounding strength from him but knows she canât walk far enough to hide it from herself.
Was it because she died near the lake? Is that the connection for them? Maybe if she understood what happened to the other Guardians on campus, sheâd know more about why she was back and why she can take Colin to her world. Colinâs little sister died on the school road, and her mother drove them all over a bridge, possibly trying to find her. Now that Colin knows how to find Lucyâs world, could it be different for them? Could they manage this strange balance in the world above and the one below? Where did Henry die, and is that where he goes when heâs gone?
In the library, Lucy searches the archives for any information about Henry Moss. The name shows up in several places: for a dentist in Atlanta, a high-school football star in Augusta. And then a story about a nineteen-year-old college student from Billings killed by a hunterâs stray bullet while hiking deep in the woods of Saint Oâs campus. Leaning back in her chair, she stares at the picture of Henry before he died, smiling at the camera with his trademark wide grin.
Caroline Novak was hit by a delivery truck heading into the school. Henry died in the woods. Lucy died in the lake. All of them returned and seemed to return for someone: a heartsick mother, a boy with cancer, and an orphan who kept a murderer from killing countless others.
âBut why do we disappear?â she asks aloud, absently rubbing the firm shape of her arm. Sheâs starting to suspect that she returns to the lake and had always been there. Is it true for the others too? Are they hovering in some mirror image of this world when theyâre gone?
She needs to find Henry. She needs to ask when he feels the most solid and permanent and whether he feels the polar opposite right before he vanishes. But she needs to do it without giving away that she feels the best when Colin is only barely escaping death.
It turns out this time heâs easy to find, reading on a bench beneath a large naked maple near the arts building. When Henry sees her, he stands, shouting her name and gesturing for her to join him. They climb the stairs and walk through the massive doors together, right as the sky opens and the snow begins to fall.
âWhereâs Alex?â she asks.
Henry gestures to the quad at their backs. âEnglish. Iâm tired of the history class Iâve been sitting in on this semester. Itâs not like I remember anything about the past, but I still feel like Iâve heard it before.â With a wink, he tugs on her hand, and she follows him into the auditorium, down the long center aisle, and into the deep orchestra pit. Although their footsteps echo in the small quasi cave, itâs easy to tell that theyâre completely alone. Theyâd be able to hear a pin drop on the stage.
âI have to tell you something,â she says, pulling at the sleeves of her shirt. âI know how you died, or, at least I know who killed you.â
âOh,â he says. âOh. I was . . . murdered too?â
âYeah. Well, maybe âmanslaughterâ is a better word. You were hit by a hunterâs stray bullet. I think you were visiting the area on a break from college and thatâs when you were shot.â
Henry stands, takes a few steps away before sitting down again, and Lucy bites back a smile at his familiar ignorance. If Colin hadnât told her about her death, she would probably still be in the dark about it all, too. Henry looks up to the ceiling, pauses, and then blinks back to Lucy. âI always half worried that Iâd have that last piece of information and boom, the sky would open up and Iâd be set free or sent back or whatever it is weâre waiting for.â
âThatâs why Colin didnât tell me how I died at first; he worried it would be the thing that would send me away for good.â Lucy shivers, hating the ticking-time-bomb sensation beneath her skin, that bleak unknown. What will be the thing that sends her away? She hesitates. âBut I think thereâs something about this school. Like it traps us somehow. Everyone I know of who died here, died on what was technically school grounds. I think there have been others, maybe there are others here now.â
âHave you seen someone?â
She shakes her head. âNo, but Colinâs mother swore she saw the ghost of her dead daughter, Caroline. She drove them off a bridge, and I wonder if she thought she figured out a way for the family to be together again. Colin barely survived the accident. What if his mother was seeing her daughter? What if weâre just ghosts, and weâre just . . . here?â
âWithout a purpose?â
Lucy nods. âWithout a purpose. Haunting. Stuck.â
Henry doesnât seem to like this idea, shaking his head sharply. âIf Caroline were a Guardian like us, no way would she have led her mother over a bridge.â
Unease tightens Lucyâs chest. âI guess.â
He stares at her in his intense Henry way, as if he can see her thoughts hovering beneath her skin. âHowâs Colin lately?â he asks.
âHeâs good,â she says, not adding what a miracle that is.
âWhat else is on your mind, little sis?â Henry turns his chair so heâs facing her, elbows resting on his knees.
âDo you sometimes feel stronger than other times?â she asks.
âWhat do you mean by âstrongerâ? You mean more solid?â
She nods, picking at a thread on her sleeve. âI know this is personal, but sometimes Colin can barely touch me, and other times I feel like . . .â Lucy remembers the picture of Colin at prom, his hands resting on a human girlâs curves. âLike he can grab on to me. But I donât think I understand what I do to make it happen. I wish I knew so I could do it more.â
âI have no good advice because it doesnât ever seem to change for me,â Henry says apologetically. And then he growls, giving her a playfully dirty look. âLucky.â
âBut when Alex touches you, can he, like, touch you?â
As if on cue, Alex walks into the auditorium. His boots clomp down the center aisle and down the steps into the pit before he collapses into a chair next to Henry. He looks back and forth between them, the bruises beneath his eyes almost black in the shadows. âWhatâs up?â
Henry reaches down and pulls Alexâs legs across his lap. âLucy asked if you like to touch me.â
She groans and buries her face in her hands. âThat is not what I asked. I asked whether you can touch him. I donât need a testimonial.â
Alex grins. âYeah. But he feels like heâs covered in static.â
Henry watches Lucy for a beat before asking, âIâm sure youâve already considered this, but whatâs going on when you feel strongest?â
She thinks back to when sheâs noticed it: at the lake, when Colin leaves for a ride. But also when Colin got back from the hospital. She wishes she could pinpoint a mood or even an event. âI notice it when weâre outside together, or when heâs riding his bike. I thought it was about him being happy, but then I felt it also when he was recovering.â
âEven if he was recovering, I think he was probably happy to be alive, in his bedroom with his hot girlfriend, so I wouldnât rule out your theory.â
Lucy ducks her head, grinning at her lap. âI guess.â
âBut my theory? You feel strongest when youâre on the right path, when youâre doing what youâre supposed to be doing here. Maybe itâs when Colin is happiest, maybe it isnât. Pick the one moment you felt strongest, most real, and do that again.â
She looks up at the ornate ceiling overhead, painted deep scarlet and gold and decorated with intricate molding. She felt almost solid before Colin chose to go into the lake. Is it wrong, she thinks, to keep this secret from Henry? Wouldnât he want to know that he could be with Alex like this?
âI mean,â Henry says, breaking into Lucyâs internal debate, âI think I feel stronger every day. And Alex is still in remission. It tells me that whatever Iâm doing for him is right.â
That makes up Lucyâs mind for her. She can never tell Henry what sheâs letting Colin do in the lake. âOkay.â
âMy point is, look at Colin. Watch him. If you do something to make him happy, you should feel that strength inside you build. If the strength is from something else, youâll notice. I saw your name on some chemistry plaques in the science building,â he says with a wide grin. âGo do some experiments.â
She stands, but decides to start right away. âHenry, what color is my hair?â
He gives her a tilt of his head before breaking into soft laughter. âNot the strangest thing youâve asked me, but okay, Iâll bite. Itâs brown.â