“I should’ve known,”

  Mickey says over me.

  “I should’ve known

  that record company rep

  would push him harder

  when I wasn’t looking.

  He was always so eager to please.

  I should’ve asked later.

  One question: ‘Did you keep the cocaine?’

  But I was too busy

  and too annoyed,

  thinking, He’s a such a big shot now

  he can take care of himself,

  and if he can’t,

  that’s his fault.”

  Mickey closes his eyes.

  “One question.

  It could’ve saved his life.”

  I turn my head

  from the sight of the pain

  that’s twisted Mickey’s memory

  and broken his soul.

  I did this to him.

  “He knows that’s not true,” I tell Krista.

  “He knows I would’ve lied.

  I always lied

  to keep from pissing him off.”

  He gives a bitter laugh.

  “Yeah, or to keep from pissing off

  Dad.”

  Then Mickey freezes,

  his eyes creasing harder than ever.

  “Oh God.”

  He clutches his elbows,

  bends forward like he’ll be sick.

  “He was afraid of me.”

  Krista raises her hand.

  “He still is.”

  “Why? When?

  I thought . . .

  I thought we were friends.”

  I try to remember

  when Mickey and I were friends.

  Before we were

  the Keeley Brothers

  with a capital B?

  Maybe when he was George Clooney

  and I was Brad Pitt.

  “So what do you want?”

  I realize Krista’s talking to me.

  “Huh?”

  “What do you want?” she repeats.

  “You brought us together

  so you could talk to him.

  What do you want him to know?”

  Mickey braces himself,

  hands squeezing his knees,

  eyelids squeezing each other,

  like he’s about to be sprayed

  with poison.

  After 233 days,

  I have no eloquent speech,

  no moving lyrics.

  “Besides being alive again,

  I want . . . more than anything . . .”

  I wait while she translates,

  then continue,

  so she won’t have to stop

  through this next part.

  “I want you to know

  that I love you, dude.

  And no matter what you think,

  it wasn’t your fault.

  It was mine.

  But I forgive you

  for not saving me

  from myself.”

  I wait for him to explode with,

  “You forgive me?

  That’s a good one.

  You should beg me

  to forgive you

  for ruining my life,

  for hurting

  Mom

  and Dad

  and Dylan

  and Siobhan

  and everyone else

  stupid enough to love you.”

  But instead,

  Mickey’s shoulders rise

  and fall

  in the longest,

  fiercest

  breath

  I’ve seen him take in months.

  He closes his eyes

  and pulls the head of the guitar

  toward his own,

  presses the pegs

  against his forehead,

  so hard,

  that when he turns

  to look straight at me,

  not through me,

  there’s a dent

  in his skin.

  “Thank you.”

  And then.

  (Uh-oh.)

  He starts to cry.

  I haven’t seen this

  since the night I died.

  I don’t know what to do.

  But Krista does.

  She kneels before him

  and takes the guitar from his lap.

  He sinks forward

  into her arms,

  adding his tears

  to the water from her hair

  speckling her new shirt.

  They cry together

  for their

  loved,

  lost,

  dumb

  brothers.

  Kurt Cobain

  didn’t die in the bathroom,

  because he died on purpose.

  Anyone with a plan

  wouldn’t choose the bathroom,

  unless they’re super considerate

  and thinking of the mess.

  I don’t know

  if Mickey was thinking of Cobain

  when he decided

  Ocean City would be the last stop

  on the road trip of his life.

  I don’t know

  what he was thinking

  when he packed

  that gun

  and that shirt.

  But the important thing is,

  Krista now has both.

  When the rain ends,

  we take Mickey’s guitar

  to the beach,

  find a spot where I sat

  when I was alive.

  He plays

  with trembling fingers

  and a voice

  rough from weeping

  but stronger than before.

  Others gather around,

  in twos and threes.

  Mickey takes requests,

  but mostly he plays

  our old favorites.

  For once, I carry the harmony

  instead of the melody,

  since Krista’s are the only ears

  that hear me.

  Siobhan and Connor appear,

  fiddle and guitar in hand,

  summoned by a text from Mickey.

  And now it’s like

  a Keeley Brothers

  acoustic reunion gig.

  Perfect.

  But after a while,

  I fall silent

  and just watch

  my brother and sister

  sing without me

  smile without me

  live without me.

  They’ll be okay.

  Without me.

  I give Krista a soft “Thanks”

  and brush her shoulder

  with a hand she can’t feel.

  She watches

  as I stand and turn away.

  I’m pretty sure

  what she’s done tonight

  wouldn’t count as

  an official Senior Week

  “Play It Safe” activity.

  But Mickey was long past

  being saved by safety.

  I walk to the edge of the water

  where I can still hear their voices

  mixed with the ocean.

  The lifeguard stand beside me

  is empty and bare

  except for one thing:

  a long black ribbon

  faded to gray,

  the name Cindy

  printed in gold-turned-yellow.

  The girl who drowned at spring break.

  That’s how she’ll be remembered—

  for her death,

  not her life,

  as people our age always are.

  Did she become a ghost?

  Is she standing next to me

  right this second?

  Has she already passed on?

  My own trip to peace,

  too long and too strange,

  is nearing the end.

  Mickey was my last,

  biggest,

  scariest
r />
  detour.

  Behind me I hear Krista say,

  Something-something “lifeguard stand,”

  and I want to run

  or swim

  or just disappear.

  But I stay.

  As the next song starts, it’s missing

  one voice.

  Soft feet thump the sand behind me,

  one pair.

  I don’t turn,

  don’t hope,

  don’t dare.

  My brother stands beside me,

  alone.

  He takes a deep, soft breath,

  and speaks my name.

  Skin Contact

  by Kimberly Derting

  afe stopped where he was in the middle of the blacktop and stared out ahead of him, straining to see through the darkness. He tried to gauge how far the road stretched before him, tried to calculate how much farther he had to walk.

  He really didn’t need to see, though. He knew, even without ever having been there before. He was close now.

  He started walking again, counting his paces as the chain that hung from his wallet slapped against his hip in a steady rhythm. Trees rose up from both sides of the narrow stretch of deserted highway, and the sound of gravel crunching beneath his heavy black boots was the only noise he could hear. It seemed too loud, and it reminded him of how alone he was out there, in the dead of the night. He felt like a target, walking down the middle of the road like that.

  It had been easy enough to ignore the strange look from the trucker he’d hitched a ride with, when he told the old guy he’d be walking the rest of the way. Rafe knew what he’d been thinking when the rig shuddered to a stop in front of the insignificant mile marker—not even a real exit—with no restaurant or gas station in sight: Walking to where? Where the hell was this kid going, out here in the middle of nowhere?

  But it didn’t matter what that grizzled old fart thought; Rafe needed to be here. He had to find out if this was real or not.

  From somewhere behind him, he heard a bird—an owl, probably. He’d never actually heard one in real life before, he’d only seen them in cartoons as a kid, but that was exactly what they’d sounded like on TV.

  He continued counting his steps and doing the math in his head. Fifty-six down. A hundred and sixteen to go.

  A hundred and fifteen . . . fourteen . . .

  How do I know that? How can I possibly know how many more steps I have to take till I get there?

  He shrugged, feeling the weight of his backpack, heavy on his shoulder. He just did, that’s all. He used to doubt them— his dreams, the ones that came to him like memories—but he was starting to realize that they were rarely wrong. Even when he wanted them to be, like this time. He wanted so badly for this one to be wrong . . . just a plain old stupid fucking dream.

  He reached into his coat pocket and pulled out the cell phone he’d bought at the truck stop where he’d hitched his last ride. It was one of those prepaid deals, so no one could track him down, so no one could figure out where he’d gone. He flipped it open to make sure he still had service—way the hell out here. There were three bars left; he shouldn’t have a problem placing the call when the time came.

  When he tucked the phone away again, his fingers brushed over the doll Sophie had given him before she’d disappeared, and his chest ached as he rubbed his thumb and forefinger over the woolly hair sticking up from its head. He missed Sophie. He missed holding her, kissing her, arguing with her.

  The doll was one of those ugly little trolls with a scrunchedup face and a naked stocky body and shocking neon-pink hair. Only this one had been altered. Sophie had used a Sharpie to streak its pink hair, and to paint its fingers and toes her favorite color: black. She’d even given it a piercing, shoving a tiny silver stud through its wide, flat nose. She called it her lucky doll.

  “Here, keep him,” she’d said, pressing the doll into Rafe’s hand and forcing him to close his fingers around it.

  “I’m not keeping Goober.”

  “His name is Goob, and I want you to have him. This way you won’t forget me while I’m gone.”

  Rafe had tossed the doll onto the bed behind him as he reached for Sophie, pulling her down onto his lap and squeezing her, crushing her against his chest as he inhaled the scent of her cheap strawberry shampoo. He didn’t want to think about letting her leave. “Damn it, Soph, don’t go. I don’t want to have to remember you with some fucked-up doll.”

  Sophie gazed up at him, her eyes glittering. She’d cried so many times since she’d told him she was leaving that he wondered how she could possibly be doing it again. He, on the other hand, hadn’t shed a single tear, and he knew that made him some kind of prick or something, but he didn’t care, he was too pissed to cry. “I mean it, Sophie. Stay with me; I’ll keep you safe. If that bastard tries to come anywhere near you—”

  She shook her head, wisps of her dirty-blond hair tickling his chin. “My mom needs me, Rafe.” She pushed away from him, wiping her nose with the back of her hand. “She can’t take care of Jacob by herself. She can’t get a job if she can’t afford a babysitter, and she can’t get a babysitter without a job.”

  “So you’re supposed to . . . what? Just quit school so you can babysit your little brother? Connie’s supposed to be the mom, not you.” Same goddamn argument, different goddamn day. One he’d already lost, even before it had started.

  And Sophie knew it. She bit the ring in her lower lip, the sparkle in her impish pale-gray eyes telling him she was no longer interested in fighting. She shoved him backward until he fell onto his twin bed—the one that was almost too cramped for the two of them. Almost. She wrapped her arms around his neck, and he felt the familiar jolt, the charge of electricity he always felt whenever their skin touched. She pressed her chest—her breasts—against him. Sophie was great at distractions. “C’mon, it won’t be forever. I’ll only stay until she can get settled somewhere, get a job, and get Jakey into day care or something. Then I’ll come back.” She nuzzled his neck, her lips and her tongue promising all of the things her words didn’t.

  He sighed, surrendering to everything she offered. But if he was going to let her go, he needed her to have a keepsake too. He tugged at the ring on his finger, a black stone surrounded by carved stainless steel that he’d picked up when they’d gone to get her lip pierced. He’d bought it because of its cool biker vibe, but it had never meant anything to him. Until now.

  “I want you to have this.” He inched back just far enough so he could hold the ring between them.

  Sophie’s eyes filled with tears again. He loved that about her: she was an emotional wreck.

  He grinned. “Does that mean you’ll take it with you?”

  She sniffed, her fingers shaking as she took the ring. “Does that mean you’ll keep Goob?”

  Rafe grimaced. He reached behind him, his hand searching for the ugly-ass doll. When he found it, he held it up by the tips of its hair. “I’ll keep him safe till you come home, but then you have to take him back.”

  Sophie slipped the chunky steel onto her finger. It was way too big and it spun in loose circles, even when she tried it on her thumb. “I’ll get you a chain,” Rafe promised. “You can wear it around your neck.”

  She’d left just three days later. That was less than two weeks ago.

  Rafe hated her for leaving that doll with him. If he’d never had it in the first place, he might not be here now.

  He jerked his hand out of his pocket as he tried to remember what number he was on. He didn’t want to lose track of how many steps he had left . . . not now, not when he was so close.

  Twenty-seven.

  A part of him wondered what would happen if he just turned around, if he stopped counting and went back to the interstate. If he went home. Ignored the dream.

  He laughed under his breath, an ugly sound. Like I could do that, he thought bitterly. Especially not this time.

  Even with no light to show him the way, he knew
he was close. And he knew it was time to make the call.

  Thirteen.

  Still walking, he reached for the cell phone again, but he hesitated before dialing. He wasn’t sure he was ready to ask for help yet; he didn’t know if he was ready to trust anyone with his secret.

  But what if he was right? What if it had been more than a simple dream?

  Five.

  He stopped. He could see the ghostly shadow of a tiny house now; it was quiet and dark. There were no lights on—inside or out. His skin tightened painfully as he stared at its inky cutout against the backdrop of trees. It was a carbon copy of the house from his dream. He hit Enter on the phone and waited.

  “Agent Sara Priest speaking.” Her voice was familiar, even behind the crisp, clipped facade she used for the FBI.

  He paused. And then: “Sara?”

  “Rafe? Where the hell are you? Jen’s freaking out. She’s been calling me every half hour to see if I’ve heard anything.” Hearing Sara say his aunt’s name made him feel guilty all over again; he knew she’d be worried sick when he just . . . vanished like that. Still, there was no way he could have told her what he was planning. Or why.

  But now he felt backed into a corner, he needed help. And Sara was the only person he could think of who might believe him.

  “I had a dream.”

  “What kind of dream? What does that mean, you had a dream?”

  “It means sometimes my dreams are more than just dreams, Sara. Sometimes my dreams are real. It’s like I can see things before they happen.” He paused, wondering what his confession sounded like from her end. But he didn’t have time to worry about that. Not now.

  There was a long silence, and Rafe wondered what she was thinking . . . or more likely, what she’d already done. He wondered if she was tracing this call yet. “Can you tell me about your dreams? About this one in particular?” she finally asked.

  Rafe shook his head against the handset. “I will, but I need to see if I’m right about it first.”

  “Can you at least tell me if someone might be hurt? Did you dream that someone was in trouble?”

  Rafe pulled up the images from his dream, the ones that would be forever etched into his memory, branded into his mind’s eye. He flipped through them like photographs— quickly, only wanting to see the ones he needed for the moment, ignoring the ones that were too difficult to look at. He felt sick all over again. “I . . . I don’t know yet.”

  “Rafe . . . please . . . don’t do anything stupid. Wait for the authorities to get there. Or at least wait for me; I’m on my way.” On the other end, he could hear her car’s engine, and he realized she must have been waiting for him to call, she must have had the trace already in place. That was the rub about knowing an FBI agent, but this time he needed her.